raghunathan
Newcomer
HD 7950 is a much better card than most people think it is. If you do some research you will know clock for clock HD 7950 is around 5% slower than HD 7970. Buying a factory overclocked HD 7950 at 900 Mhz and pushing it to 1050 Mhz in AMD CCC puts the card exactly in between ref HD 7970 (925 Mhz) and HD 7970 Ghz (1050 Mhz) performance wise.
The new batches of HD 7950 could have had a better branding strategy. Even a HD 7960 might have been sensible. AMD's product marketing is really stupid in keeping the same naming.
The boost voltage on the HD 7950 boost edition is very high at 1.25v. That is probably the reason that the ref HD 7950 cards which are flashed with the HD 7950 Boost BIOS aren't hitting 925 Mhz speeds consistently. They are mostly hitting their TDP restrictions easily and thus are only running at 850 Mhz. I hope AMD partners come out with HD 7950 Boost cards that use chips that are binned appropriately and hit the maximum boost speeds consistently.
As always manual overclocking is always the best option. Using AMD CCC just max out those power sliders to +20% and you should be able to hit 1100 - 1150 Mhz with 1.25v.
The new batches of HD 7950 could have had a better branding strategy. Even a HD 7960 might have been sensible. AMD's product marketing is really stupid in keeping the same naming.
The boost voltage on the HD 7950 boost edition is very high at 1.25v. That is probably the reason that the ref HD 7950 cards which are flashed with the HD 7950 Boost BIOS aren't hitting 925 Mhz speeds consistently. They are mostly hitting their TDP restrictions easily and thus are only running at 850 Mhz. I hope AMD partners come out with HD 7950 Boost cards that use chips that are binned appropriately and hit the maximum boost speeds consistently.
As always manual overclocking is always the best option. Using AMD CCC just max out those power sliders to +20% and you should be able to hit 1100 - 1150 Mhz with 1.25v.