News Headlines
- Fri, May 24
- Time and Eternity Preview: All the Single Ladies
- Joe Danger 1 and 2 set to crash onto Steam later this year, Big Picture and Workshop support included
- Sony explains why Gran Turismo 6 is staying on PS3, cites PS3 potential and install base
- Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Trilogy HD is comign to iOS on May 30, prepare your Apple devices
- PlayStation 4 could reach Europe within 2013, according to UK newspaper ad
New Articles
Related Articles
After the launch of the Kepler series, NVIDIA has essentially locked in the high-end market. Yet without a mid-range Kepler product, the AMD Radeon HD 7870 and HD 7850 still reign supreme in their respective price segments. This is due to Pitcairn based graphics cards having the same performance as last generation’s high-end boards, all while consuming less energy and creating less noise. The Pitcairn graphics we are going to be examining today comes to us from PowerColor, but seeing as it is part of the PCS family, it sports more efficient design and higher clocks speeds.
As part of AMD's Southern Islands architecture family, the PowerColor HD 7850 PCS+ comes with all the latest technologies such as Eyefinity 2.0, AMD HD3D technology, and Accelerated Parallel Processing. PowerColor has enhanced the reference board design by including their Gold Power Kit design along with a DrMos Digital PWM, multi-phase design and a large direct contact heatsink. Additionally, the PowerColor HD 7850 PCS+ has higher clock speeds than the reference boards. Out of the box, the PCS+ card has a GPU clock speed of 1000MHz, up from 860MHz, and a memory clock of 1225MHz.

Even with higher clock speeds, improved power circuitry and a robust thermal solution, the PowerColor PCS+ is priced only $10 higher than the reference models.
| Specifications | |
|
Graphics Engine |
Radeon HD 7850 |
|
Video Memory |
2GB GDDR5 |
| Engine Clock | 1000MHz |
| Memory Clock | 1225MHz x 4 (4.9Gbps) |
| Memory Interface | 256bit |
|
DirectX Support |
11.1 |
|
Standard Display Connectors |
DL-DVI-I/ SL-DVI-D / HDMI / MINI DPx2 |
|
Bus Standard |
PCIE 3.0 |
|
|

The fact the Sapphire versions are smaller than the reference model is an incredibly awesome plus for me as my case is rather small. Also I'd imagine it'd stay cooler than the PowerColor version because it has two fans, and a unique heat sink set up. I'll give my results when it's in my computer and playing games ( probably in 4-6 days ).
On topic, owned the card, satisfied with it. It was either this or Sapphire, got this in the end. Was surprised at the temperature because there was only one fan and the max temperature i got was 67° at 100% GPU load. I agree with the article's writer, simply the best bang for buck graphic card out there.
Is an Powercolor non an Sapphire...
Nice review, regards.