Diamond Radeon HD 3850 512MB Ruby Edition Video Card
Diamond released ATI Radeon HD 3870 and Radeon HD 3850 graphics cards back in November when they originally came out, but they were based off the ATI reference design and were the same as everyone else's. Diamond went back to the drawing board and came up with an Radeon HD 3850 that would be unique to them and be directed at overclockers and enthusiasts. Read on to check out the Diamond Radeon HD 3850 512MB Ruby Edition Video Card!
Overcloaked! I think it is written just fine. Over-cloak-ed. Cloak. Cloak like the heatsink? They over cloaked the card. Made a new heatsink. Not overclocked it. So I think they got it right.
sasamkd wrote:Overcloaked! I think it is written just fine. Over-cloak-ed. Cloak. Cloak like the heatsink? They over cloaked the card. Made a new heatsink. Not overclocked it. So I think they got it right.
One thing I'd like to point out is the use of Sanyo WG electrolytic instead of OSCON or conductive polymer caps as is vogue in video cards. Perhaps not a good cost cutting measure for the long term. I've seen old skool 9200's fail when recapped with the normally reliable Panasonic FM. I'm not saying this will definitely be a problem, but I'm only saying this could be a long term issue. More so given that the ripple current capacity of electrolytics are far less than a comparable conductive polymer.