AnandTech's R520, RV530 and RV515 Pre-NDA Extravaganza
by Kristopher Kubicki on September 13, 2005 9:24 PM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
ATI's RV515 aka Radeon X1300
ATI's internal roadmap reveals that the RV515 (X1300) is the follow up to RV370, and will come in three main variations with several HyperMemory options and differing core clocks as well. Our previous roadmaps have revealed that RV515 is exclusively a single quad design, with memory interfaces from 32 to 128bits. Even the low end RV515 cards will utilize some form of H.264 decoding and/or HDCP support, making these cards extremely attractive for DVR machines.
ATI RV515 Roadmap
|
||||
Card | Pipes | Std Core Clock | Std Memory | Memory Width |
X1300 Pro | 4 | 550MHz | 500MHz | 128-bit |
X1300 LE | 4 | 450MHz | 400MHz | 128-bit, 64-bit |
X1300 LE HyperMemory | 4 | 450MHz | 500MHz | "64-bit" |
HyperMemory versions of RV515 will utilize a 32-bit memory bus, but since they utilize the system memory they use a different system of determining the "Supported Memory" configurations as follows:
HyperMemory "Supported Memory"
|
||||
Card Memory | System Memory | "Supported Memory" | ||
32MB | 256MB | 128MB | ||
64MB | 256MB | 128MB | ||
128MB | 256MB | 256MB | ||
32MB | 512MB | 128MB | ||
64MB | 512MB | 256MB | ||
128MB | 512MB | 256MB |
Wrap Up
Among other noteables in the roadmap, some of the more prominent features of R520 included HDMI over Silicon Image's WALDO interface -- all other cards in the roadmap that feature HDCP but not HDMI will use TI's TFP513PAP. On low profile RV530 cards, HDMI connectors are supported directly on the PCB, while analog and DVI connectors are attached via a ribbon cable to a daugther card. For users looking to set up a cheap TV-only DVR, the daughtercard is completely optional - saving money and space.
In the roadmap we also saw some new SKUs from the X550 line and X600 line supporting HyperMemory. With NVIDA's quasi-TurboCache GeForce 6500, an X600 HyperMemory card could put a real advantage of low end video processing back in ATI's court.
X800GTO is also going to be hitting the shelves soon with street prices of $159 for the 128MB version and $179 for the 256MB version. You might want to check our previous roadmap on this particular product, since everyone (including ATI) expects a sub $200 12 pipe R420 to really become the de facto midrange option. A low volume sixteen pipe version will show up for select vendors in select regions.
We go under NDA in the near future for many things ATI, so get ready for AnandTech's upcoming coverage come launch time!
65 Comments
View All Comments
Chadder007 - Tuesday, September 13, 2005 - link
Looks like the ATI parts are all prices just WAY too high. I guess ill be getting last gen probably.Ozz1113 - Tuesday, September 13, 2005 - link
~= 50 watts, thats pretty amazing. Should be quiet and cool too.smn198 - Wednesday, September 14, 2005 - link
Why are the 60W top end cards going to be dual slot?Leper Messiah - Wednesday, September 14, 2005 - link
Hm. I don't think that the x1800's TDP is only 60 watts, IIRC its the x1600's that max out at a 60Watt envelope.Looks interesting, but WE WANT BENCHIES!
pxc - Tuesday, September 13, 2005 - link
when the NDA expires.I will be interesting to see how the new X1800 series performs.