Radeon RX 7900 XTX: Several pictures of Powercolors Liquid Devil published
After Powercolor’s RX 7900 XTX Liquid Devil was recently announced, a first unboxing of the water-cooled Radeon has now appeared. As a result, several images of the custom design are now public.
A few days ago, AMD board partner Powercolor published a first teaser for the upcoming Radeon RX 7900 XTX Liquid Devil. Now several shots of the water-cooled graphics cards have appeared on the web, which confirms the rumors of an approaching release. That would be desirable for water cooling fans, because so far there have only been PCGH price comparisons XTX graphics cards with air cooler listed. A graphics card with a pre-installed full-cover cooler would be a welcome alternative here.
Liquid Devil unboxing
The said images of the Liquid Devil first appeared on Twitter, where an editor from the French website Overclocking.com, @overclex, published four shots of the graphics card. Shortly thereafter, a link to an unboxing followed on the website, in which further recordings are shown. According to this, Overclocking.com has surprisingly already received a sample of the Liquid Devil, but so far it has only been allowed to photograph it and not test it.
Due to this limitation, there are unfortunately not too many further details. Most of the pictures only show what you would expect from Powercolors Liquid Devil anyway: A full-cover water cooler from EK Water Blocks, a black backplate and three 8-pin sockets. In addition, the graphics card is said to come with the EK-Loop Leak Tester Flex. This is an air pump with a pressure gauge, which can be used to check the cooling circuit for leaks.
Last on the subject: PowerColor teases Radeon RX 7900 XTX Liquid Devil
However, specifications and pictures of the PCB are missing. However, the website expects the PCB to be similar to that of the Powercolor Red Devil. It is also revealed that the Liquid Devil has a dual BIOS: users can operate the graphics card in either “OC” or “Unleash” mode. The latter should probably allow a higher TDP and possibly also bring with it higher clock rates. For precise information, however, we have to wait until there are official details from Powercolor.
Source: overclocking via Videocardz
Reference-www.pcgameshardware.de