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Graphics Cards

XFX R9 280X 3GB Graphics Card Review

Final Thoughts


Pricing

XFX’s R9 280X Double Dissipation Black Edition OC graphics card should be coming in at around £275 in the United Kingdom. In the USA should be retailing for around $340 if the UK pricing is anything to go by (so that’s a 14.5% premium over RRP pricing of $300). Of course what’s worth noting is that the current versions of the XFX R9 280X DD OC graphics card are shipping with two different versions both of which have different clock speeds. The normal edition has 850MHz core, 1000MHz boost and 6000MHz memory (and is slightly cheaper at around $300) while XFX told us that the Black Edition card (which we reviewed) will ship with FINAL clock speeds of 1.1GHz on the core and 6600MHz on the memory. My advice to any prospective buyers would to be to ensure you know which version you are buying because it can be easy to confuse the two. That said I have been even more confused by the fact the Black Edition OC version may now be shipping with 1080MHz core and 6200MHz memory which is lower than the 1100MHz core and 6600MHz memory on our sample, again we advise prospective buyers to be aware of these discrepancies.

Final Thoughts

The XFX R9 280X is a very nice card. Firstly, the out-of-the-box overclock is highly aggressive giving some excellent performance numbers that we certainly didn’t expect to see for its modest price. Compared to other R9 280X cards we’ve tested the power consumption is relatively tame and the temperatures are also impressive too, sitting at around 70-75~ degrees at maximum Furmark load. While the noise results weren’t that flattering in numerical terms I was still impressed by XFX’s R9 280X because the tonality of the noise is very subtle, not sharp and piercing like a stock blower fan cooler. This is thanks to XFX’s impressive new Double Dissipation cooler where the fans are silent other than the noise of the air movement, so the noise is a lot more natural than a blower style fan where the mechanical noise is very piercing. The aesthetics are excellent too, XFX have really changed the design for the better in my opinion and the build quality seems a lot sharper than previous HD 7970 Double Dissipation graphics cards. It really is a subtle looking piece that would look great in most cases, just watch out for the 11.5 inch length that could cause problems in smaller cases.

In terms of the negatives well firstly, I am not happy XFX are selling this same card with different clock speeds to the sample we reviewed. I’d advise consumers to make sure they are fully aware of what model they are buying and what clock speeds it has, if in doubt ask your retailer. Providing you can get the speeds our graphics card came with, you’re really getting a great deal. Secondly, despite the XFX R9 280X DD BE OC having a major advantage of an unlocked voltage – we saw poor overclocking results, even when maxing out that voltage at 1.3 volts. Maybe we just had a weak piece of silicon but other reviews of the same card have noted that it only uses a 6 phase VRM which could potentially limit overclocking compared to rival cards that use 8 phase or higher VRMs. Even with VRM limitations most R9 280X GPUs should do at least 1150MHz+ at stock voltages, and ours simply didn’t.

Pros

  • Excellent price to performance metrics
  • Strong out-of-the-box overclock
  • Very stylish design
  • Effective cooling solution
  • Lifetime warranty in North America

Cons

  • The cooler can be loud at intense loads even if the tonality is subtle
  • Overclocking on our sample was very mediocre
  • Inconsistency of clock speeds between our review sample and current retail versions
  • Only 1-2 year warranty in the UK depending on the retailer

“XFX’s R9 280X Double Dissipation OC graphics card is a beautiful looking piece of hardware that fully exploits the power of the AMD’s R9 280X GPU by aggressively overclocking it straight out of the box. Furthermore XFX’s newly designed cooling solution adds finesse to the design of the product and also keeps it quiet under most operational loads thanks to the two large 10cm fans. At its price the XFX R9 280X Double Dissipation is a solid choice for any gamer looking for a powerful, relatively quiet, good looking and affordable AMD graphics card. However, we encourage consumers to consider the caveats of our review before making any purchasing decisions.”

Thank you to XFX for providing this review sample.

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7 Comments

  1. You seem to have real problems overclocking a lot of cards you get in for review. Have you tried swapping out other parts of your test bench to see if it fixes it?

    1. The majority of cards we get overclock okay. The only cards I can think of that didn’t were the two MSI GTX 700 ones (GTX 760/GTX 770 TF Gaming) and this card. Everything else did what was expected or sometimes more. Overclocking is more a result of the silicon lottery than anything else. We’ve got a capable motherboard, CPU and PSU so there’s no reason to assume it is being caused by anything other than rubbish overclocking samples.

  2. These temps make no sense. Unless you are testing inside of a commercial refrigerator there is no way your temps can be this low. Cards at less then 5c when idle??? That would literally be just 5 degrees above freezing, so even if powered off those cards could never hit those temps as they would never go below the ambient room temperature.

    Your 290 and 290X temps under load are also a full 20c, or more, then every other benchmark that has been posted. No way these numbers are real unless you are doing something else to chill the units.

    1. We use delta temperatures as stated in the methodology and as written on the graphs, normally the room temperature is about 21-23 degrees.

      That way readers can estimate what temperatures it will run at for them by adding on their typical room temperature. Of course if it is an card with a thermal control point (which is increasingly becoming the trend these days) then deltas can become a little irrelevant.

      1. Hmm I have R9 280X DD Black 1080/1550 1.2v (cant use the voltage on XFX BIOS lol but on the box i have that has unlocked voltage, strange indeed) but i have flashed the BIOS from Sapphire TOXIC and now i have ulocked Voltage 🙂 so i Gaming on 1050/1550 1.175v +5%POW and its safe, cool and efficient even better that my last XFX 7970DD GHzEd 😀 My temps in BF4 1h gaming is about 56-58 deg. cels. I have Corsair 750D Silento with 3x140mm fans on 50-75% I cant even hear my XFX 😉
        the last one was noisy and hot 68-71deg. cels. So XFX is better and better. RMA is Great also.
        And question 4U – why the v is locked? is maby the BIOS is set to 2 (default?)

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