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First images of the RX 480 from the different vendors, although all of them come with the reference cooler:

XFX Radeon RX 480 pictured, features 1288 MHz clock http://videocardz.com/61147/xfx-radeon-rx-480-pictured-features-1288-mhz-clock
Sapphire and PowerColor Radeon RX 480 pictured as well http://videocardz.com/61162/sapphire-and-powercolor-radeon-rx-480-pictured-as-well

XFX:

Sapphire:

PowerColor:

Apparently, only the XFX card comes with a slight overclock and a backplate.

 

Also, caution rumor!

AMD RX 480 Can Hit 1.5Ghz+, New Overclocking Tool With Voltage Control Coming

http://wccftech.com/amd-rx-480-1500mhz-overclocking-tool-voltage-control/#ixzz4BqetC885

AMD is launching a new overclocking tool for the RX 400 series with voltage control, oh and the RX 480 is capable of 1.5Ghz+ clock speeds.

With the Radeon RX 480 and the RX 400 series in general AMD wants every user to be able to extract even more value out of their RX 400 series graphics card. Beyond what they’d normally get straight out of the box. The key to achieve this is to make overclocking more accessible, more convenient and more valuable. This is where AMD’s new overclocking tool will play an instrumental role in supercharging the bang behind every buck.

We’ve detailed sometime ago that AMD’s new RX 400 series featured more sophisticated boost function and on-chip and voltage regulation hardware. The new tool takes full advantage of that to make overclocking easier, more straightforward and deliver better results. AMD’s new overclocking tool will include an assortment of features, including voltage control.

We’re told AMD has been debating what kind of voltage control it should make available to RX 400 series users. It’s understandable as to why anyone inside AMD would be hesitant to making such a feature available in the company’s own software. After all it’s a risky endeavor to take on as a vendor. Not all gamers are enthusiasts or experienced overclockers.

Now let’s talk more about what the RX 480 can do in terms of overclocking. Many RX 480 graphics cardsfrom AMD’s Add-In-Board partners will be capable of  ~1.4Ghz boost clocks after some very basic overclocking. The cards can be pushed beyond that with voltage adjustments. The “Beast Mode” RX 480 $299 cards that we had talked about two days ago will come with pretty hefty factory overclocks right out of the box and some will be able to hit 1.5Ghz+ on air after some over-volting and fine tuning.

 

Lastly, new info about the 460.

AMD Radeon RX 460 Gets Single and Crossfire 3DMark 11 Benchmarks – The Super Affordable ‘Budget Gaming’ Graphics Card

http://wccftech.com/radeon-rx-460-crossfire-3dmark-11-benchmarks/#ixzz4BqkshpN1

AMD recently revealed the complete lineup of RX branded Radeon graphics cards and I published benchmarks for the RX 470 singe and crossfire configurations. Naturally, its now time for me to do the same with the Radeon RX 460 graphics card which will be based on the Polaris 11 GPU. The Polaris 11 GPU is basically the Polaris 10 cut in half, and has been associated with the machine IDs: 67EF:C3 and 67FF:08, both of which were used to trace the benchmarks in the 3DMark 11 database.

The benchmarks were found by tracing the machine IDs of the RX 460. This means that these GPUs were part of AMD’s internal testing and were probably tested with partial driver support. While I didn’t notice a lot of variation unlike the RX 470, it is still possible that these numbers will improve once driver support for the RX 400 series lineup improves. While its older siblings, the RX 480 and RX 470 were both aimed at the minimum VR spec, the RX 460 is a no-nonsense budget gaming card.




Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.