Monday, 8 July 2019

AMD RADEON RX 5700 AND RX 5700 XT REVIEW: COMPETITION HEATS UP

THE NAVI ERA HAS BEGUN
AMD RADEON RX 5700 AND RX 5700 XT TESTED
The summer of 2019 has been one of rumors, leaks, dramatic product reveals, and price wars. And it’s only July 7. And what would 7/7 be without the launch of a 7nm GPU? How about three of them? AMD has officially released the new Radeon RX 5700, RX 5700 XT, and RX 5700 XT 50th Anniversary Edition today.
We received two of these cards to test (the Radeon RX 5700 and standard RX 5700 XT) and are now ready to show our initial finding with the first Navi GPUs. And no, the lineup of game presented here is not ideal, and we were running pre-release drivers so performance will improve in time, but such is life.
Note: While Josh dissects RDNA we must content ourselves with some early benchmarks. And you know what? Spoiler alert: Things are looking pretty good so far.
SPECIFICATIONS
The Radeon RX 5700 Series family consists of three graphics cards so far, with the RX 5700 and RX 5700 XT joined by a 50th Anniversary Edition of the RX 5700 XT that offers higher clock speeds and a different trim color.
Note: in the spec table below the RX 5700 Series Base, Game, and Boost clocks are officially listed as “up to” frequencies. As to the 50th Anniversary version of the RX 5700 XT, it provides a 1680 MHz Base, 1830 MHz Game, and up to 1980 MHz Boost frequency out of the box.
REFERENCE CARD GALLERY
Feast your eyes on the latest Radeon cooler designs. Yes, they are blower-style coolers, but AMD says they have tuned the fan profiles for quiet operation. More on that later.
GAME BENCHMARKS: 2560X1440
The results to follow speak for themselves, so I won’t add too much commentary. Radeon RX 5700 XT and RX 5700 did very well in our initial testing, and the final $399/$349 pricing looks pretty good based on these results.
ASHES OF THE SINGULARITY: ESCALATION
While an unreliable benchmark at times in my experience at lower resolutions (I’m looking at you, 1080p CPU performance game testing results), AotS is nonetheless a good GPU performance test at 1440p. Here it was run as with previous reviews at the “high” detail preset using the DX12 API. In fact, in all the games to follow the “high” preset was used, with the exception of World of Tanks which was set to “ultra” settings.
POWER CONSUMPTION, TEMPS, AND NOISE
The move to 7nm with Navi has been well publicized (and I am publishing this on 7/7 just to drive the point home a little more), and with that should come some power savings even though clock speeds have moved up from prior Radeon cards.
Total power with the RX 5700 XT is about the same as what we saw with the RX 590 we’ve tested, placing this closer to NVIDIA’s RTX 2070 SUPER. The non-XT RX 5700 was a closer to the RTX 2060 SUPER, tied with the GTX 1070 Ti.
Clearly getting the highest performance possible out of these Navi GPUs was a higher priority than power savings, just as we saw with the 7nm Radeon VII. We are still looking at far lower power than a Vega 64, and higher performance to boot. Things are moving in the right direction.
TEMPERATURES AND NOISE
While temps and noise will vary based on load (and eventual aftermarket cooler designs), what we observed with these reference designs was about what one might expect from a blower-style cooler. Temps are fine, with 76 C (hot spot/tJunction at 94 C) from the RX 5700 XT and 66 C (hot spot/tJunction at 77 C) with the RX 5700, both in a ~25 C room.
As to noise levels, these are indeed controlled, with 31 – 31.6 dBA at idle and a max of 48.5 – 48.6 dBA from both cards on the open test bench. Manually tuning the fan profile will provide lower temps, but these will start to get loud quickly. AMD has struck a pretty good balance between temps and noise with these cards, and the sound did not carry a “whine” and was easier to ignore as a result.
FINAL THOUGHTS (THE STORY IS JUST BEGINNING…)
These benchmarks skewed towards DX11 and only covered one resolution, but just from these initial findings I have come away very impressed with the performance of Navi. The RX 5700 XT is faster overall in these tests vs. the RTX 2060 SUPERat the same $399 price point.
Granted, hardware ray tracing support is something AMD can’t match right now so if that matters to you NVIDIA is the only game in town, and the RTX 2060 SUPER would make more sense in that scenario.
We haven’t even scratched the surface with these new cards, as testing needs to be done with more and newer games, Vulkan API, and we had been waiting on new drivers to start overclocking as well. Add X570 to the mix and July will be a very busy month.

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