SAPPHIRE Announces NITRO+ Radeon RX 480
by Daniel Williams on July 22, 2016 9:00 AM ESTThis morning SAPPHIRE is announcing their latest card in the NITRO+ family, the NITRO+ Radeon RX 480. Some key features of SAPPHIRE’s new NITRO+ RX 480 cards include higher clock speeds, an improved cooler with a back plate included, and software fan health monitoring. Along with this we’ll also get RGB lighting and power delivery that is improved over what we saw on the reference RX 480.
The cooler is improved from SAPPHIREs last generation with two 95mm dual-ball bearing fans. Meaning longer fan life and potentially quieter operation. In fact, SAPPHIRE isn’t content simply improving the quality of their fans. They also are including a feature called “Fan Check” in their upcoming SAPPHIRE TriXX 3.0. Fan Check allows users to check the health of their fans and if an issue is detected they can contact customer support for a replacement fan. Thanks to quick swap fans the user can replace just the fan with a single screw, no more need to return a whole card for a dead fan, and no more need to disassemble a card to remove the fan. I think this sounds like a neat feature, but considering the use of dual ball bearing fans and that the fans shut off when temperatures are under 52 degrees Celsius, I won’t be surprised if the number of users needing replacements is rather low.
It has occured to me that you can’t throw a dart without hitting an RGB LED card anymore. Regardless it does come in handy when color coordinating a build. Along with having the usual option to control the RGB lighting through SAPPHIRE’s utility, there is also a hardware controlled red button on the back of the card which will let one work through the various included modes such as fan speed or GPU temperature modes.
Radeon RX 480 Specification Comparison | ||||||
SAPPHIRE NITRO+ Radeon RX 480 8GB | SAPPHIRE NITRO+ Radeon RX 480 4GB | AMD Radeon RX 480 8GB | AMD Radeon RX 480 4GB | |||
Boost Clock | 1342MHz | 1306MHz | 1266MHz | |||
Memory Clock | 8Gbps GDDR5 | 7Gbps GDDR5 | 8Gbps GDDR5 | 7Gbps GDDR5 | ||
VRAM | 8GB | 4GB | 8GB | 4GB | ||
Launch Date | Next Week | 6/29/2016 | ||||
Launch Price | $269 | $219 | $239 | $199 |
We will be seeing factory overclocks from both the 8GB and 4GB versions of this card. While base clocks are presumably higher they were not shared, though the boost clocks come out to 6% and about 3% over AMD's reference cards respectively. The memory clocks are right in line with the reference Radeon RX 480 8GB and 4GB cards.
For those that enjoy running on overclocked hardware the NITRO+ Radeon RX 480 includes a NITRO Boost dual bios switch that further increases the boost clock and power limit for some extra performance. To help feed overclocking endeavors the card also comes with an 8-pin power connector and a new model of their own Black Diamond Chokes which they profess drop coil temperatures by another 15%.
Amusingly, with the increasing growth in VR this generation having multiple HDMI outputs is becoming a highlighted feature all around. Following suit, we can find dual HDMI on the business end of the NITRO+ Radeon RX 480 sharing space with two DisplayPort connectors and a DVI-D port.
Finally, for pricing the SAPPHIRE NITRO+ Radeon RX 480 will be listed at $269 for the 8GB card and $219 for the 4GB model, a $30 and $20 premium over the reference models, respectively. So far the NITRO+ RX 480 appears to be a robustly built card with all the bells and whistles we’re seeing this generation including RGB lighting, fan shutoff, and warranty fan replacement while they were at it. Exact release dates have not yet been revealed, but those interested in these cards will find them available from etailers next week.
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zmeul - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
270$ ?!?!EVGA GTX1060SC sais hi
lazarpandar - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
Yeah 1060 availability is surprisingly good. No reason to buy this...DrKlahn - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
No availability on NewEgg for the 1060 (none for the reference 480 either). Haven't been any since day 1 that I have seen. Early benches show the Nitro competing quite well with heavily overclocked 1060's. If your intention is to only keep the 1060 a short time, it's a compelling choice since it's DX11 performance is a bit better. Low level API's the reference 480 is slightly better overall than the 1060 and the Nitro even more so. As their usage increases the 480 seems like a more solid long term choice. The Nitro at that price point is even more compelling.xthetenth - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
Just for one if you want to get the most out of your money and pair it with an inexpensive freesync screen, NV has literally no answer.just4U - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
"No reason to buy this..."---
I dunno... from all the reviews I've seen of the 1060/480 I'd say that the only reason to buy a 1060 is because you can't find a 480 in stock... as the 480 is clearly the better card.
For the majority out there.. provided their not fanboi's of either company I think they'd be happy with either card especially coming off mid range radeon/GeForce cards of even a generation ago as both seem to offer near 980 performance.
yannigr2 - Saturday, July 23, 2016 - link
Vulkan and DirectX 12 says Hi.systemBuilder - Tuesday, July 26, 2016 - link
Wow thats so weird that the channel is stuffed with 1060 product and its available everywhere. It's extremely hard to get an Rx480 because they are flying off the shelves at lightspeed, i guess everybody wants one. I'm so glad I got mine on July 5th because it seems AMD is suffering from having a product thats way more popular than the 1060 lol ...komplik - Thursday, July 28, 2016 - link
In our country there is full stock of reference RX480 but sells wery bad as best sellers are GXT1070 and surprisingly GTX970 with same price tag as 8GB RX480.Lolimaster - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link
You can run 2 RX480 and access full Vulkan/Async suppport.You can't SLI GTX1060, nvidia screwed you and only emulated async.
shing3232 - Saturday, July 23, 2016 - link
Can 1060 even do SLI?