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Review: Sapphire Radeon HD 4830 512MB - CrossFire making sense?

by Tarinder Sandhu on 13 November 2008, 14:31

Tags: Radeon HD 4830 512MB GDDR3 PCI-E, Sapphire

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qap5m

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Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

Call of Duty 4: MW (high-end) 1,680x1,050 4xAA 16xAF
Sapphire HD 4830 512MBZOTAC GTX 260 896MBBFG GeForce GTX 280 OCXBFG GeForce GTX 260 OCX MAXSapphire HD 4830 XFForce3D HD 4870PowerColor Radeon HD 4850
59.6368.6788.9779.77108.876.963.83


Call of Duty 4: MW (high-end) 1,920x1,200 4xAA 16xAF
Sapphire HD 4830 512MBZOTAC GTX 260 896MBBFG GeForce GTX 280 OCXBFG GeForce GTX 260 OCX MAXSapphire HD 4830 XFForce3D HD 4870PowerColor Radeon HD 4850
50.1358.7776.2368.0392.3765.953.23


Call of Duty 4: MW (high-end) 2,560x1,600 4xAA 16xAF
Sapphire HD 4830 512MBZOTAC GTX 260 896MBBFG GeForce GTX 280 OCXBFG GeForce GTX 260 OCX MAXSapphire HD 4830 XFForce3D HD 4870PowerColor Radeon HD 4850
30.9739.8751.4746.6759.342.233.93


We already know that Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare runs nice and smoothly on ATI hardware, but take a look at the two-card results and they blow everything else out of the water, whilst costing less-than £200.