
The GPUs aren't cherry picked either, though these cards are still factory overclocked. Both are clocked at up to 1,411MHz (boost) and use high-end parts like the limited edition SKU, but sport a different looking cooling shroud. Sapphire offers two other 'regular' Nitro+ models, one with 8GB of memory (Nitro+ Radeon RX 580 8GD5) and one with 4GB (Nitro+ Radeon RX 580 4GD5). It draws power from 8-pin and 6-pin PCIe connectors (one each). Dual ball bearing fans and heatpipes help cool the GPU, and of course there is RGB lighting, though it's not overdone.ĭisplay outputs consist of a DVI-D port, two HDMI ports, and two DisplayPort 1.4 ports. The stylish cooling solution has a gunmetal finish with a large backplate, shown above.

These have the same display inputs, but require just a single 8-pin PCIe connector. The last two are 8GB (AVRX 580 8GBD5-3DHD/OC) and 4GB (AVRX 580 4GDB5-3DHD/OC) models with different cooling solutions, both with a boost clock of up to 1,350MHz. It offers the same display connections and power plug requirements. One is an 8GB version of the Golden Sample (AVRX 580 8GBD5-3DH/OC) that uses the same color but with slower clocks (up to 1,380MHz). Powercolor's three other RX 580 models are all Red Dragon variants.

Display connectors include three DisplayPort, one HDMI, and one dual-link DVI-D. It also has a custom cooling solution and draws power from 6-pin and 8-pin PCIe connectors. Like Gigabyte/Aorus, Powercolor doesn't bother to mention core clocks, and instead lists a boost clock of up to 1,425MHz. Shown above is Powercolor's fastest model, the long-winded Red Devil Golden Sample Radeon RX 580 (AVRX 580 8GBD5-3DHG/OC) with 8GB of GDDR5 memory. Powercolor is another active partner of AMD's with no less than four Radeon RX 580 cards to kick things off.
