| Standing screen display size | 1 |
|---|---|
| RAM | 8 GB |
| Memory Speed | 1386 MHz |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Radeon RX 500 RX 580 |
| Chipset Brand | AMD |
| Graphics Card Ram Size | 8 GB |
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- TERMS & DETAILS: More information about this protection plan is available within the “Product guides and documents” section. Simply click “User Guide” for more info. Asurion will also email your plan confirmation with Terms & Conditions to the address associated with your Amazon account within 24 hours of purchase (if you do not see this email, please check your spam folder). Contact us if you cannot locate your plan confirmation and Terms & Conditions via email at AmazonFeedback@Asurion.com.
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XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS XXX Edition 1386MHz OC+, 8GB GDDR5, VR Ready, Dual BIOS, 3xDP HDMI DVI, AMD Graphics Card (RX-580P8DFD6)
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Purchase options and add-ons
| Graphics Coprocessor | Radeon RX 500 RX 580 |
| Brand | XFX |
| Graphics Ram Size | 8 GB |
| GPU Clock Speed | 1.37 GHz |
| Video Output Interface | DVI |
About this item
- The XFX RX 580 series graphics card feature the latest Polaris architecture which includes the 4th gen GCN graphics cores, a brand new display engine, new multimedia cores, all on the revolutionary next finfet 14 process technology for enhanced performance and efficiency
- Equipped with XFX double dissipation cooling technology for optimal cooling and performance. Minimum power requirement is 500 watts. Memory clock true: 8.0GHz, boost OC : 8.1GHz
- Multiple factory GPU overclocked settings - 1366 MHz true clock and 1386 MHz OC
- AMD VR ready premium - Experience the new generation of compelling virtual reality content with the Radeon RX GTS graphics card paired with the leading VR headsets. The Radeon RX GTS graphics card coupled with AMD LiquidVR technology delivers a virtually stutter-free, low latency experience, essential for remarkable virtual reality environments
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Product Description
XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS XXX Edition 1386MHz OC+, 8GB GDDR5, VR Ready, Dual BIOS, 3xDP HDMI DVI, AMD Graphics Card (RX-580P8DFD6) Product description (optional): XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS XXX Edition 1386MHz OC+, 8GB GDDR5, VR Ready, Dual BIOS, 3xDP HDMI DVI, AMD Graphics Card (RX-580P8DFD6) XFX Dual BIOS Mining - We know enthusiast like options, our RX 570 and 580 graphics cards are shipped with a Dual BIOS. If you want optimal gaming performance just install it and go. For cryptocurrency mining, simply shut the system down and flip the BIOS switch on the card. Our mining BIOS is already tuned to give increased mining hashrates without hassle. Radeon CHILL Technology - Radeon Chill is an intelligent power-saving feature for Radeon graphics that dynamically regulates framerate based on your movement’s in-game. During peak gameplay, Radeon Chill works to deliver the full framerate potential of Radeon graphics. As movement decreases, Radeon Chill reduces your gameplay framerate. Designed to save power, lower temperature, and increase GPU life, Radeon Chill enables high performance graphics when you battle and saves power when you explore. High Performance Unibody Heatsink - The XFX RX RS series features our all new Unibody VRM Heatsink construction enable direct transfer to the primary heatsink and heat pipes. This unique combination of material and construction enhances thermal efficiency by a total of 40%. XFX Exclusive Ultra Low Noise XL Inductors - GPU inductors are notoriously noisy with that tiny buzzing noise caused by traditional low quality inductors but XFX's exclusive premium quality XL Inductors utilize multiple layers to seal the Inductors completely and securely nearly eliminating inductor noise.
Compare with similar items
This item XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS XXX Edition 1386MHz OC+, 8GB GDDR5, VR Ready, Dual BIOS, 3xDP HDMI DVI, AMD Graphics Card (RX-580P8DFD6) | XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS Black Edition 1425MHz OC+, 8GB GDDR5, VR Ready, Dual BIOS, 3xDP HDMI DVI, AMD Graphics Card (RX-580P8DBD6) | ASUS Radeon RX 580 8GB Dual-Fan OC Edition GDDR5 DP HDMI DVI VR Ready AMD Graphics Card (DUAL-RX580-O8G) | MSI Gaming GeForce GTX 1660 Super 192-bit HDMI/DP 6GB GDRR6 HDCP Support DirectX 12 Dual Fan VR Ready OC Graphics Card (GTX 1660 Super VENTUS XS OC) | ASUS GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB Phoenix Fan Edition DVI-D HDMI DP 1.4 Gaming Graphics Card (PH-GTX1050TI-4G) | ASUS ROG-STRIX-RX580-O8G-GAMINGOC Edition GDDR5 DP HDMI DVI VR Ready AMD Graphics Card | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.5 out of 5 stars (7399) | 4.3 out of 5 stars (486) | 4.3 out of 5 stars (1020) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (1996) | 4.6 out of 5 stars (3356) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (1365) |
| Price | $129.99$129.99 | $279.95$279.95 | $105.98$105.98 | $239.99$239.99 | $190.00$190.00 | $279.52$279.52 |
| Sold By | Fennec, Inc | TekDepo(We Record SN#) | Skyquack | RAIDEALS | BO PECHAP | itembazaar |
| Computer Memory Size | 8 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB | — | 4 GB | 8 GB |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express | PCI Express | PCI Express | PCI-Express x16 | PCI Express | PCI Express |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Radeon RX 500 RX 580 | AMD Radeon RX 580 | AMD Radeon RX 480 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 Ti | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 | AMD Radeon RX 480 |
| Graphics Ram Size | 8 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB | 6 GB | 4 GB | 8 GB |
| Graphics Ram | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR6 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 |
| Memory Bus Width | 256 bits | 256 bits | 256 bits | 192 bits | 128 bits | 256 bits |
| Memory Speed | 1370 MHz | 8000 MHz | 8000 MHz | 1815 MHz | 7008 MHz | 400.0 MHz |
| Processor Count | 0 | — | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| RAM Type | DDR5 SDRAM | DDR5 SDRAM | — | GDDR6 | Unknown | — |
What's in the box
From the manufacturer
XFX True Clock Technology
BIOS Controlled overclocking.
Software controlled clock speeds can be hindered by overall computer performance. XFX's True Clock however is hardware controlled clock speed performance optimization, so your card is always running at an optimized performance level
XFX OC+ Capable
Going Beyond True Clock.
While True Clock locks in a super fast optimal speed on a hardware level, RX Series cards with an OC+ rating are tested at the factory to go even beyond XFX's True Clock. We encourage you to try these factory tested speeds by using the simple to use AMD Wattman utility, letting you squeeze every last bit of performance out of your card.
Enhanced VRM and Memory Cooling
Cooling technologies don't stop at just the GPU.
After countless hours of research, development, and testing our engineers have developed all new VRM and Memory cooling technology, reducing temperatures VRM by up to 30' C and GDDR temperatures by 20' C, all while reducing dB noise by an additional 5%.
Videos
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Customer Review: Electrical Interference With DisplayPort
Regeneration

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3:20
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XFX Radeon RX 580 GTS XXX Edition 1386MHz OC+
Merchant Video
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0:19
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Customer Review: Picture distortion / fragmented screen
Brian Patrick

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Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | XFX |
|---|---|
| Series | RX-580P8DFD6 |
| Item model number | RX-580P8DFD6 |
| Item Weight | 2.5 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 10.63 x 1.57 x 4.88 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 10.63 x 1.57 x 4.88 inches |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR5 SDRAM |
| Flash Memory Size | 8 |
| Manufacturer | XFX |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B06Y66K3XD |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | April 18, 2017 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.5 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #28 in Computer Graphics Cards |
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Having said all that, the graphics card is good for what it is. I won't be using it much for gaming, but as a test bench for testing software downloads in case they contain malware. It has an unactivated copy of Windows 10 Pro (which has no watermark, nor prevents me from customizing settings that you can't normally customize without activation) with no personal information stored on it, so in the event it contracts a virus, I can simply wipe the drive and reload. I might use this system to test some free games, so the 8GB of VRAM would be better than the 4GB GT 730 I previously had in it.
This card also works with the very latest Adrenalin software and drivers, so it's still a supported graphics card. So, again, if you don't care to register this card with all your personal information, nor are you running Triple-A games, then this card will fit most bills.
[NOTE: MST stands for Multi-Stream Transport, and it is the ability of later DisplayPort and Mini DisplayPort to attach 2 or 3 monitors to the same DP connector that show as physically separate screens (NOT just duplicating the screen the way some HDMI "splitters" do)].
I have tested this with both 1080p and 720p (I use 720, because my eyes are just too bad to see the smaller text, and previous scaling settings sometimes conflicted with certain programs), and both settings work fine.
I am very impressed, overall, with how much this card is able to do.
Other than OC on Linux or downclocking the VRAM, the only other things I can think another user might need to test are higher res monitors (I will NOT be testing that, due to eyes) and VR performance (probably will not be able to test this myself for at least a while, if I even am able to, at all, with my awful eyesight).
Looking back at the original review, though, I DO have to update a couple other things:
1) I have not experienced that screeching noise in a long time. It might have been a wire I was using.
2) When I wrote that fan controller, it is no longer quieter than my RPi, although it is still quieter than my new high-powered fans (in other newest pic).
3) I have tried it with some games, and it plays them fine. It also benches really well on Heaven -- I tested it a while back across a 2x2 of my monitors (before buying the newest ones) with max spec and 3D anaglyph, and it still ran well, so you can easily use this for most games.
-----
EDIT 1: Have now had card for about a year, and I've added more monitors to it, as you'll see in my newest pics. It's still going strong, but I did replace the thermal paste on the sink with Arctic MX 4.
I find that I was able to lower temps on it by getting more powerful fans and improving cable management.
Have written software to control the fans and clock on it from a Web UI, but I have had no luck getting it to overclock to the supposed 1386MHz, nor have I had any luck clocking down the VRAM. Perhaps that is the curse of using Linux, but I USUALLY use it just to run many screens, so I don't particularly NEED to OC the GPU clock. Would be nice if the VRAM clock rate could stay down, though, to save power -- the issue I've had with that is that it keeps going back up to 2000MHz right after I write to the /sys/ driver file; screens flicker as it clocks the VRAM down, but then it goes right back up. IDK if such an issue exists on other 580s, so I can't rate that down, b/c it might not have anything to do with XFX.
---------
ORIGINAL REVIEW:
So far, seems to be working quite well. I am currently using it with 3 displays (2x 1080p monitors and 1x 1680x1050 TV -- aspect ratio sucks on the TV and can't display 1080p w/o part of the screen falling off the sides -- not the card's fault; it does that on whatever it's connected to).
All of them are connected to the displayport connectors using DP to HDMI cables.
Monitoring it from my sensors program, it tends to run (after having warmed up) between 47-50°C idle, or around 49-52° with a YT video playing. Have not actually tried it for gaming or mining yet, though.
Pretty much noiseless. My Rasp Pi with coolers is actually louder than this card.
Do, however, recommend that your case be designed with airflow in mind, and maybe get more powerful fans. When I was using a positive-pressure design, the air passing over it and through the holes in the PCIe slots was not enough, and it both idled around 53-55°C, AND it pushed my CPU temps up by around 5-7°, as well (CPU is right above it). Changed this, and both cooled down by several degrees.
Running it with Debian GNU+Linux, and as long as you have the amdgpu driver installed, it seems to have no issues. Sadly, have not found any software to control its clocks or fans through GNU+Linux, though.
NOTE: It's important to know that it actually registers as an RX 470/480. I talked with someone about this, and it's because it uses the same Polaris chips, just clocked up and updated.
Couple little glitches that sorta irk me, but not enough to bring down score:
1) Sometimes, it produces a low screeching-like noise on startup for each monitor. Probably a signal transfer thing. Weird, only happens sometimes, a little annoying, scared me a bit at first.
2) It also causes my BIOS screen to flicker several times after POSTing and before the bootloader runs. Also freaked me out the first couple times, but now I'm used to it.
Neither of the aforementioned glitches occurred when using my Ryzen 5 2400G iGPU (before purchasing this card), so I think it has something to do with the card itself (could be the wires, though, but I have no other DP devices to test them with). Not major, but things that I paid attention to, nonetheless. As far as I'm aware, if you experience this, it's not an actual issue, just a quirk -- will update on that if I need to, though.
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2019
[NOTE: MST stands for Multi-Stream Transport, and it is the ability of later DisplayPort and Mini DisplayPort to attach 2 or 3 monitors to the same DP connector that show as physically separate screens (NOT just duplicating the screen the way some HDMI "splitters" do)].
I have tested this with both 1080p and 720p (I use 720, because my eyes are just too bad to see the smaller text, and previous scaling settings sometimes conflicted with certain programs), and both settings work fine.
I am very impressed, overall, with how much this card is able to do.
Other than OC on Linux or downclocking the VRAM, the only other things I can think another user might need to test are higher res monitors (I will NOT be testing that, due to eyes) and VR performance (probably will not be able to test this myself for at least a while, if I even am able to, at all, with my awful eyesight).
Looking back at the original review, though, I DO have to update a couple other things:
1) I have not experienced that screeching noise in a long time. It might have been a wire I was using.
2) When I wrote that fan controller, it is no longer quieter than my RPi, although it is still quieter than my new high-powered fans (in other newest pic).
3) I have tried it with some games, and it plays them fine. It also benches really well on Heaven -- I tested it a while back across a 2x2 of my monitors (before buying the newest ones) with max spec and 3D anaglyph, and it still ran well, so you can easily use this for most games.
-----
EDIT 1: Have now had card for about a year, and I've added more monitors to it, as you'll see in my newest pics. It's still going strong, but I did replace the thermal paste on the sink with Arctic MX 4.
I find that I was able to lower temps on it by getting more powerful fans and improving cable management.
Have written software to control the fans and clock on it from a Web UI, but I have had no luck getting it to overclock to the supposed 1386MHz, nor have I had any luck clocking down the VRAM. Perhaps that is the curse of using Linux, but I USUALLY use it just to run many screens, so I don't particularly NEED to OC the GPU clock. Would be nice if the VRAM clock rate could stay down, though, to save power -- the issue I've had with that is that it keeps going back up to 2000MHz right after I write to the /sys/ driver file; screens flicker as it clocks the VRAM down, but then it goes right back up. IDK if such an issue exists on other 580s, so I can't rate that down, b/c it might not have anything to do with XFX.
---------
ORIGINAL REVIEW:
So far, seems to be working quite well. I am currently using it with 3 displays (2x 1080p monitors and 1x 1680x1050 TV -- aspect ratio sucks on the TV and can't display 1080p w/o part of the screen falling off the sides -- not the card's fault; it does that on whatever it's connected to).
All of them are connected to the displayport connectors using DP to HDMI cables.
Monitoring it from my sensors program, it tends to run (after having warmed up) between 47-50°C idle, or around 49-52° with a YT video playing. Have not actually tried it for gaming or mining yet, though.
Pretty much noiseless. My Rasp Pi with coolers is actually louder than this card.
Do, however, recommend that your case be designed with airflow in mind, and maybe get more powerful fans. When I was using a positive-pressure design, the air passing over it and through the holes in the PCIe slots was not enough, and it both idled around 53-55°C, AND it pushed my CPU temps up by around 5-7°, as well (CPU is right above it). Changed this, and both cooled down by several degrees.
Running it with Debian GNU+Linux, and as long as you have the amdgpu driver installed, it seems to have no issues. Sadly, have not found any software to control its clocks or fans through GNU+Linux, though.
NOTE: It's important to know that it actually registers as an RX 470/480. I talked with someone about this, and it's because it uses the same Polaris chips, just clocked up and updated.
Couple little glitches that sorta irk me, but not enough to bring down score:
1) Sometimes, it produces a low screeching-like noise on startup for each monitor. Probably a signal transfer thing. Weird, only happens sometimes, a little annoying, scared me a bit at first.
2) It also causes my BIOS screen to flicker several times after POSTing and before the bootloader runs. Also freaked me out the first couple times, but now I'm used to it.
Neither of the aforementioned glitches occurred when using my Ryzen 5 2400G iGPU (before purchasing this card), so I think it has something to do with the card itself (could be the wires, though, but I have no other DP devices to test them with). Not major, but things that I paid attention to, nonetheless. As far as I'm aware, if you experience this, it's not an actual issue, just a quirk -- will update on that if I need to, though.
Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2023
Top reviews from other countries
XFX poi ha praticamente messo il massimo che si poteva su questa scheda, offrendola praticamente al prezzo più basso. Ma andiamo con ordine:
PORTE:
Dotazione probabilmente standard da questa categoria in su, ma ho apprezzato molto la presenza anche della vecchia DVI-D, oltre a ben 3 DP e una HDMI. Faccio notare che non ci sono uscite analogiche integrate, solo digitali.
ALIMENTAZIONE:
Vi servirà un BUON alimentatore da almeno 500W per andare sul sicuro, con cavo PCI-EX. Il connettore di alimentazione è ad 8 pin, ma nella confezione troverete anche un adattatore da 6 ad 8 pin, nel caso ne abbiate bisogno.
MATERIALI E FABBRICAZIONE:
XFX ha fatto davvero un bel lavoro, inserendo componentistica di qualità, con ottimi VRM (i regolatori di corrente e tensione), un back plate nero in metallo che oltre all'estetica conferisce solidità, doppia ventola e copertura in plastica con look al carbonio, una sciccheria. Completa la dotazione il massiccio dissipatore heat pipe, ben 8 GB di memoria GDDR5 e, ovviamente, la GPU AMD RX-580.
E' presente un piccolo led che si illumina di rosso se l'alimentazione è insufficiente, di blu se è tutto OK.
RAFFREDDAMENTO E CONSUMO:
Non ho avuto modo di misurare il consumo effettivo, ma il mio alimentatore da 450W tiene tranquillamente il mio Ryzen 5 3600, la XFX RX-580 e tutto il resto senza fare una piega, quindi di sicuro non è estremamente affamata di energia.
Il dissipatore e le ventole la mantengono sempre sotto gli 80° anche sotto carico; a piena potenza non hanno mai raggiunto la rotazione massima, mantenendosi molto poco rumorose durante il gaming e praticamente mute durante l'uso desktop. Forse è anche merito della buona ventilazione del mio case, ma dal punto di vista raffreddamento e silenzio sono estremamente soddisfatto. Ah, le ventole sono estraibili.
PRESTAZIONI:
Ancora oggi, con titoli a 1080P e settings a volte medi ma anche a volte alti a seconda del gioco, vi regala un frame rate sopra i 50 FPS.
Giusto per un esempio, col benchmark Superposition unigine 2 a 1080P e dettagli medi, il frame rate non è mai sceso sotto i 50 fps mantenendo la media di 59 fps e ottenendo un punteggio di quasi 8000 punti.
Riesce inoltre a gestire senza alcun problema la risoluzione mostruosa di 5120X1440 del mio monitor super ultra wide a 120 hz; dopo averla montata ed installato i driver, è stato tutto un altro mondo, è come se gli oggetti sul desktop scorressero senza alcun attrito, talmente tutto è fluido.
PREZZO:
179€ per questa scheda nel 4° trimestre 2019 sono un vero affare, considerato tutto quello che ha da offrire.
CONCLUSIONI:
Se siete alla ricerca di una scheda video che offra prestazioni oneste e valide, con budget sui 200€, la RX-580 è ancora oggi una scelta valida. Potreste optare per la versione pompata RX-590, che tra le altre cose è realizzata con un processo produttivo migliore; tuttavia i pochi fps che guadagnereste non ne giustificano la spesa superiore. Inoltre il clock più spinto, nonostante la litografia migliore, la rende identica alla 580 quanto a rumore e consumi.
Quindi, secondo me, la RX-580 è ancora oggi la miglior scheda video budget per rapporto qualità/prezzo, sotto i 200€.
E questa versione di XFX è probabilmente la migliore, in quanto ha poco o nulla da invidiare ai marchi più importanti, e offre TUTTO quello che offrono i concorrenti, pur costando meno.
Vi ricordo inoltre che per questo prezzo avrete anche ben OTTO GIGA di video ram; la sua diretta concorrente, la GTX 1660 di nVidia, costa anche quasi 100€ in più e monta "solo" 6 GB; certo, offre prestazioni superiori, ma il divario è netto solo su alcuni titoli; ribadisco che a 1080P, se vi accontentate, con la XFX RX-580 risparmierete molto.
Infatti la consiglio a chi ha un budget limitato; chi può spendere, sa bene che troverà architetture migliori, più giovani e potenti.
Reviewed in Italy on September 28, 2019
XFX poi ha praticamente messo il massimo che si poteva su questa scheda, offrendola praticamente al prezzo più basso. Ma andiamo con ordine:
PORTE:
Dotazione probabilmente standard da questa categoria in su, ma ho apprezzato molto la presenza anche della vecchia DVI-D, oltre a ben 3 DP e una HDMI. Faccio notare che non ci sono uscite analogiche integrate, solo digitali.
ALIMENTAZIONE:
Vi servirà un BUON alimentatore da almeno 500W per andare sul sicuro, con cavo PCI-EX. Il connettore di alimentazione è ad 8 pin, ma nella confezione troverete anche un adattatore da 6 ad 8 pin, nel caso ne abbiate bisogno.
MATERIALI E FABBRICAZIONE:
XFX ha fatto davvero un bel lavoro, inserendo componentistica di qualità, con ottimi VRM (i regolatori di corrente e tensione), un back plate nero in metallo che oltre all'estetica conferisce solidità, doppia ventola e copertura in plastica con look al carbonio, una sciccheria. Completa la dotazione il massiccio dissipatore heat pipe, ben 8 GB di memoria GDDR5 e, ovviamente, la GPU AMD RX-580.
E' presente un piccolo led che si illumina di rosso se l'alimentazione è insufficiente, di blu se è tutto OK.
RAFFREDDAMENTO E CONSUMO:
Non ho avuto modo di misurare il consumo effettivo, ma il mio alimentatore da 450W tiene tranquillamente il mio Ryzen 5 3600, la XFX RX-580 e tutto il resto senza fare una piega, quindi di sicuro non è estremamente affamata di energia.
Il dissipatore e le ventole la mantengono sempre sotto gli 80° anche sotto carico; a piena potenza non hanno mai raggiunto la rotazione massima, mantenendosi molto poco rumorose durante il gaming e praticamente mute durante l'uso desktop. Forse è anche merito della buona ventilazione del mio case, ma dal punto di vista raffreddamento e silenzio sono estremamente soddisfatto. Ah, le ventole sono estraibili.
PRESTAZIONI:
Ancora oggi, con titoli a 1080P e settings a volte medi ma anche a volte alti a seconda del gioco, vi regala un frame rate sopra i 50 FPS.
Giusto per un esempio, col benchmark Superposition unigine 2 a 1080P e dettagli medi, il frame rate non è mai sceso sotto i 50 fps mantenendo la media di 59 fps e ottenendo un punteggio di quasi 8000 punti.
Riesce inoltre a gestire senza alcun problema la risoluzione mostruosa di 5120X1440 del mio monitor super ultra wide a 120 hz; dopo averla montata ed installato i driver, è stato tutto un altro mondo, è come se gli oggetti sul desktop scorressero senza alcun attrito, talmente tutto è fluido.
PREZZO:
179€ per questa scheda nel 4° trimestre 2019 sono un vero affare, considerato tutto quello che ha da offrire.
CONCLUSIONI:
Se siete alla ricerca di una scheda video che offra prestazioni oneste e valide, con budget sui 200€, la RX-580 è ancora oggi una scelta valida. Potreste optare per la versione pompata RX-590, che tra le altre cose è realizzata con un processo produttivo migliore; tuttavia i pochi fps che guadagnereste non ne giustificano la spesa superiore. Inoltre il clock più spinto, nonostante la litografia migliore, la rende identica alla 580 quanto a rumore e consumi.
Quindi, secondo me, la RX-580 è ancora oggi la miglior scheda video budget per rapporto qualità/prezzo, sotto i 200€.
E questa versione di XFX è probabilmente la migliore, in quanto ha poco o nulla da invidiare ai marchi più importanti, e offre TUTTO quello che offrono i concorrenti, pur costando meno.
Vi ricordo inoltre che per questo prezzo avrete anche ben OTTO GIGA di video ram; la sua diretta concorrente, la GTX 1660 di nVidia, costa anche quasi 100€ in più e monta "solo" 6 GB; certo, offre prestazioni superiori, ma il divario è netto solo su alcuni titoli; ribadisco che a 1080P, se vi accontentate, con la XFX RX-580 risparmierete molto.
Infatti la consiglio a chi ha un budget limitato; chi può spendere, sa bene che troverà architetture migliori, più giovani e potenti.
Hasta la fecha todo bien, va perfecta (la compre hace medio año)
per il mio utilizzo è più che buona








































