Shortly after Legit Reviews published our Radeon HD 4830 articles we were notified by AMD that every reference card they sent out to reviews came with an incorrect BIOS. The BIOS that shipped on the Radeon HD 4830 had one too many of the SIMDS disabled and that the Radeon HD 4830 had just 560 stream processors enabled instead of the 640 stream processors that it should have been running. Read on to see what the right BIOS does for performance!
would make sense till they run out of the low binned chips. I seem to remember something like that happening with Intel cpus where they had run out of the low binned chips and people were overclocking the low end chips to hell and back getting 100% overclocks IRC.
AMD 960T OC'ed to 4gz
ASRock 970 EXTREME4 AM3+ AMD 970
2 X G.SKILL Ares Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 2133 (PC3 17000)(16gb)
EVGA SuperClocked 02G-P4-2682-KR GeForce GTX 680 2GB 256-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16
GI-JOE wrote:More than likely, do you think that the 4830 might be a lower bin compared to the 4850? And thus the failures to flash it to 4850 speeds/bios?
yes, I fully believe the Radeon HD 4830 is nothing more than a Radeon HD 4850 that failed tested and uses memory chips that are lower clocked or also didn't pass bin testing. It's the same core and the same PCB as the Radeon HD 4850, so this is 100% logical.
The HD4850 features the full RV770 core with all 10 SIMD cores enabled giving a full 800 Stream Processors. HD4830 was supposed to have 8 SIMD cores enabled for a total of 640 Stream processors. However somehow a BIOS was programed to the cards that further reduced the amount of SIMD cores to 7 cores for a total of 560 stream processors. The two proper SIMD cores are disabled supposedly on package while one SIMD core was disabled via BIOS. Therefore if you attempt to flash a BIOS telling the card it has a full 10 cores while it really only has 8 cores available would cause you to brick the card.
I imagine all these "broken" RV770s have been saved up over the last few months and now AMD is cashing in on these otherwise useless cores.