facebook rss twitter

Review: Asus, Gigabyte, Sapphire and XFX Radeon RX 460 compared

by Tarinder Sandhu on 27 January 2017, 15:30

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD), ASUSTeK (TPE:2357), Gigabyte (TPE:2376), Sapphire, XFX (HKG:1079)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaddmn

Add to My Vault: x

Testing Methodology

GPU Comparisons

 
GPU
Memory
Miscellaneous
Cores
Base
(MHz)
Boost
(MHz)
Size
(MB)
Clock
(MHz)
Bus
(bits)
Power Config
Driver
Asus Radeon RX 460 Strix OC 896/1,024 - 1,256 4,096 7,000 128 6 17.1
Gigabyte Radeon RX 460 OC 896 - 1,212 2,048
4.096
7,000 128 - 17.1
Sapphire Radeon RX 460 Nitro OC 896 - 1,250 4,096 7,000 128 6 17.1
XFX Radeon RX 460 Core DD 896 - 1,220 4,096 7,000 128 6 17.1
EVGA GTX 1050 SC Gaming 640 - 1,250 2,048 7,000 128 6 372.90

HEXUS Mainstream Test Bench

Hardware Components
Processor Intel Core i3-6100
CPU Cooler Intel Reference
Motherboard MSI H110M
Memory Corsair Vengeance Select 8GB (2x4GB)
Power Supply Antec Earthwatts 380W
Primary Storage 250GB SK hynix SL308
Chassis Antec NSK3180
Operating system Windows 10 Home (64-bit)

Benchmark Suite

Synthetic Benchmarks
3DMark Time Spy
VRMark Orange Room
Gaming Benchmarks and Settings
Doom Vulkan, TSSAA (8TX), Ultra Quality - 1080p
Rise of the Tomb Raider DX12, SMAA, High Quality - 1080p
Total War: Warhammer DX12, FXAA, High Quality - 1080p
General Benchmarks
Power Consumption To emulate real-world usage scenarios, we record system-wide mains power draw both when idle and while playing Tomb Raider
Temperature To emulate real-world usage scenarios, we record GPU core temperature both when idle and while playing Tomb Raider
Noise A PCE-318 meter is used to record noise levels when idle and while playing Tomb Raider
Overclocking Maintaining out-the-box voltage, we increase the card's power target and aim for an optimal balance of core and memory overclock.

Notes

We actually have seven cards in the line-up, not the five shown above. The sixth is the Asus Radeon RX 460 Strix OC flashed from the standard, shipping 896 cores to a full complement of 1,024 while keeping the core speeds the same. The purpose of doing so is to show how much extra performance can be achieved on the RX 460 GPU. The Gigabyte is presented in both 2GB and 4GB flavours.

Given that flashing avails more performance through unlocking of an extra 128 cores, all cards, except the Gigabyte duo, have 1,024-core BIOSes available for download and flashing. We confirmed that it works with the Asus, Sapphire and XFX cards, though only the Asus' numbers are graphed, for brevity. The reasons that it may not currently work with Gigabyte are down to a lack of board power: these GPUs don't use a six-pin power connector.

The benchmarks take place on a sub-£600 base-unit build specifically used for a previous article, and it makes sense to use this kind of base PC rather than, say, an overclocked Core i7 that is the usual mainstay of our testing. We've also included a GeForce GTX 1050 from EVGA, priced at the same £125 levels as most Radeon RX 460 4GB cards.

Warranty-wise, Sapphire, Gigabyte and Asus offer three years, while XFX goes for two-year cover. All cards have a hybrid-fan mode that turns the spinners off when the temperature is below 55-60°C.