Thursday, August 12th 2010

Sapphire Announces HD 5770 FleX Edition, Connect Four Displays in Eyefinity

SAPPHIRE Technology introduces the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX, the latest graphics card in the highly successful SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series. This is the first graphics solution to support three screens in ATI Eyefinity mode, out of the box, without the need for DisplayPort monitors or active adapters. The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX can also support four monitors in ATI Eyefinity mode with a single card.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX is a SAPPHIRE original design based on the latest 40nm graphics architecture from the ATI division of AMD. It supports the advanced graphical features of DirectX 11, and delivers spectacular video clarity, speed and visual effects.
The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX is the first card on the market to support three DVI monitors in ATI Eyefinity mode and deliver a true SLS (Single Large Surface) work area without the need for costly active adapters. The majority of HD 5000 series cards with ATI Eyefinity support require the third monitor to be DisplayPort compatible, or an active DisplayPort to DVI or VGA adapter to be used.

With the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX, the first two monitors are connected to the DVI outputs, as usual. A third DVI monitor can be connected to the HDMI output with the passive cable adapter supplied or to the DisplayPort output with a simple passive adapter. This allows users with existing DVI monitors to use three of them in ATI Eyefinity mode without any additional investment.

Four monitors can all be used in ATI Eyefinity mode with this card - but in this case the fourth monitor does have to be DisplayPort connected.

With 800 Stream processors and 1GB of the latest GDDR5 memory, together with clock speeds of 850MHz core and 1200MHz (4.8GHz effective) for the memory, the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX delivers excellent performance. Its dual heatpipe cooler and profiled fan with dust resisting sealed ball bearings keep the card cool yet running quietly even under load.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX speeds through DirectX10.1, DirectX 10 and DirectX 9.0 games and applications, as well as supporting stunning new levels of detail, transparency and lighting effects in newer releases of software using DirectX 11. All of this comes with modest active power consumption and Dynamic Power Management delivering super low-power operation in 2D or idle.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series has an on board hardware UVD (Unified Video decoder), considerably reducing CPU load and delivering smooth decoding of Blu-ray and HD DVD content for both VC-1 and H.264 codecs, as well as Mpeg files. In the SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series the UVD has been enhanced to be able to decode two 1080p HD video streams simultaneously and to display HD video in high quality with Windows Aero mode enabled. HDMI capability has also been upgraded to HDMI 1.3a with Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

This series of cards supports the latest features demanded by Microsoft DirectX 11, including DirectCompute 11 instructions, hardware Tessellation and multi-threaded communications with the system CPU. These combine to provide new capabilities for the interaction between transparent objects, new lighting and accelerated post processing effects as well as physics calculations, image rendering and accelerated video transcoding.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series is supported by AMD's DirectX 11 WHQL certified graphics driver which delivers support for all of the key DirectX 11 level features required for new gaming experiences and acceleration of next generation high performance applications.
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10 Comments on Sapphire Announces HD 5770 FleX Edition, Connect Four Displays in Eyefinity

#1
Ezio
Sapphire rocks

well sapphire make good cards.i have a 5770 and is working perfect no problem at all.when it comes to ati cards sapphire is the only brand i can trust.:)
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#2
mdsx1950
Nice. I like the design of the card. Eyefinity without adapters is awesome.
Posted on Reply
#3
ebolamonkey3
Why does this card seem so blocky? Is it shorter than normal or is that fan bigger than the one that's on the Vapor-X version?

I was thinking, on high end cards that put out a lot of heat, why don't vendors make the PCB wider, so it's a bit taller than the PCI bracket, slap a couple of bigger fans on there (as in, bigger than 90mm), and then add a backplate EVGA style for better support and cooling (and style)? Shouldn't be any issues with clearance since most cases would have enough width anyways. So it would be like what MSI does w/ their twin frozr or what Gigabyte does on their 5870, but with bigger fans.
Posted on Reply
#4
ivicagmc
Cooling looks exactly the same as on mine sapphire 5770, only plastic cover is different and ATI Eyefinity support from the box...
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#5
Kitkat
more like stretch edition. somones always going to push whats intended i wonder what the preformance "flex" is
ebolamonkey3Why does this card seem so blocky?
Thats the design... dosnt seem that way it is.
Posted on Reply
#7
cauby
ivicagmcCooling looks exactly the same as on mine sapphire 5770, only plastic cover is different and ATI Eyefinity support from the box...
yeah,the fan looks exactly like the one on my Vapor-X.
Posted on Reply
#8
HillBeast
I actually saw this on their YouTube yesterday, and was waiting for you guys to do a press release. I think this is awesome that they managed to get ALL 4 outputs working at the same time. I wonder how that did that, it must have some kind of adapter built into the board itself.

It just goes to show how flexible the Radeon 5000 series can be, and just how on to it the guys at Sapphire are. Just a shame they didn't know how to do this when the released the Vapor-X 5870...
Posted on Reply
#10
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
Not sure if it is necessary or not. I do have a question.

Has anyone tried the new 5X series (say from 5750 to 5870) with any type of CAD software (AutoCAD 2010, 3dmax, etc)?
Posted on Reply
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