| Thursday, January 21st 2010 |

As we previously reported, MSI is working on a Lightning Edition of the ATI Radeon HD 5870. The card will be designed with overclockers in mind and comes with two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors for maximum power delivery. It also has easily accessible measuring points for the GPU voltages - a voltmodder's dream. Today we received several new pictures from an anonymous source in Taiwan that shows the card in all its glory.
More pictures below the fold.
More pictures below the fold.
posted by W1zzard - 11:27 AM | Related News |
User comments
Is it twelve dual phase analog. ?
Anyways, Sweet!, they should have upped the caps, theese are a simple mod in most cases that can decrease the rippel by a conciderable amount!
Other words for it is power stability.
Any news about the length of this card ... ??? ...
EDIT : 2 x 8-pin ... hmm .... why would it need so much power just because its clocked at 1000mhz ... i've seen people achieve those clocks with reference cards ...
by pantherx12 (11:42 AM) - Reply
by: afwIts shorter then normal, hence being wider then normal.
Any news about the length of this card ... ??? ...
by: pantherx12i know its shorter ... just wanted to know the exact length ... :D
Its shorter then normal, hence being wider then normal.
wow 2x8pin, damnnnnnnnn. . . . . . . . that looks like a awesome card and I wonder how much more ocing potential it has
lol maybe amd should look at something similar to this for the reference 5890 design and give it uber clocks.
by pantherx12 (11:51 AM) - Reply
by: afwAh my mistake!
i know its shorter ... just wanted to know the exact length ... :D
by A Cheese Danish (11:55 AM) - Reply
Wow, this looks pretty bawls!
Awaiting on price is the next step for me.
I had a Déjà vu (MSI Lightning GTX 275)
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/MSI/GTX_275_N275GTX_Lightning/images/front.jpg
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/MSI/GTX_275_N275GTX_Lightning/images/front.jpg
by pantherx12 (1:32 PM) - Reply
by: HossHugeSo people with small cases can fit the cards easier. I prefer them rear facing myself, infact I'd prefer them rear facing and on the other side of the PCB so close to the mobo as possible.
Why do they mount the power connecters that way?
by: pantherx12But won't it also make the card even wider? For example in my case, I couldn't mount a side fan if my connectors were facing that way.
So people with small cases can fit the cards easier..
by: pantherx12I agree. On my 4850's the connectors are on the outside of the card so I have to run the power out there.
I prefer them rear facing myself, infact I'd prefer them rear facing and on the other side of the PCB so close to the mobo as possible.
by: pantherx12If it's as long as GT200 cards it's a must to have them up. Rear near mobo would be great though for cable hiding, though I like the ease of unplugging the power cords when on top.
So people with small cases can fit the cards easier. I prefer them rear facing myself, infact I'd prefer them rear facing and on the other side of the PCB so close to the mobo as possible.
by pantherx12 (2:06 PM) - Reply
by: OnBoardSee I just pull the card from the slot first, that way the cables are easy to unplug regardless of where they are. Same for putting the card in. Cables in first follow by plugging the card into the mobo.
If it's as long as GT200 cards it's a must to have them up. Rear near mobo would be great though for cable hiding, though I like the ease of unplugging the power cords when on top.
this thing has one sweet power circuitry delivery system... i bet its going to be alot more expensive than the current lineup but THAT much better cant wait to see a full review on one
by: pantherx12Yeah in that case it's easy. In my previous case I had PCI-E power cables attached to my case side and now they go somewhere below. Card won't come out with cables in place :) Anyhow, nice looking card, will surely keep tinkerers happy.
See I just pull the card from the slot first, that way the cables are easy to unplug regardless of where they are. Same for putting the card in. Cables in first follow by plugging the card into the mobo.
by M3T4LM4N222 (9:57 PM) - Reply
Would be great if it didn't take 2 x 8 pin.
by: M3T4LM4N222probably there for marketing reasons, just get an adapter
Would be great if it didn't take 2 x 8 pin.
by Divide Overflow (10:19 PM) - Reply
I hope their custom cooling design is up to the task of all the voltage people will be throwing at it!
by 3volvedcombat (10:47 PM) - Reply
Why are people saything this and that about the 2x8 pins people.........
HAVE YOU SEEN THE PHASES ON THE CARD, They want users to have the MAXIUMUM AMOUNT OF POWER to be able to stream right to the gpu..... Its not for just showing off, its for getting the 1.5Ghz core with double the regular voltage people....
When kingpin gets the sucker does a little cap mods, he will do something insane with the card, and it helps to have 2x8 pins on that card for maxiumum power transfer.
So lets not just go cry babying and putting negatives on the 2x 8pins on the card, This card was specifically maid for overclocking, And if you just want to only have a 1 Ghz HD 5870 then go purchase other offerings. But if you want some insane speeds, the best quality, the best power thruput, and are trying to get a benchmark world record, then just buy MSi's offering of a extremely pimped out HD 5870.
**** Basicly***** To sum it up, this isnt a card the average user and video card overclocker would even buy, they might, but they wont push massive volts and they wont use extreme cooling like fully water or up. But i want to see in the right rig how far this HD 5870 can go ;D
by: 3volvedcombatthat's what msi wants you to think, they want to sell a lot of these cards, not only 20
**** Basicly***** To sum it up, this isnt a card the average user and video card overclocker would even buy, they might, but they wont push massive volts and they wont use extreme cooling like fully water or up. But i want to see in the right rig how far this HD 5870 can go ;D






