ATI video card suffixes

ATI video cards can have one of multiple suffixes attached to their name indicating relative level of performance, the use of suffixes was abandoned with the release of Radeon HD 3000 series products, the last two digits of the model number was then used to indicate relative performance of the products, except for the "X2" suffix indicating dual-GPU solutions, such that the product has two GPUs on one PCB. Below is the listing of the suffixes used in previous generations of products, in order from least powerful (at the top) to the most powerful. (at the bottom)

Not all suffixes will be found on a particular line of cards.

Contents

Descriptions/Common Features

Each suffix tends to indicate a general trend of features and limitations that are common when applied to different lines of card and different graphics cores. These are related to the number of processing units (pipelines) available, the bit width of the video RAM interface, and the clock speed of the graphics core and video RAM.

HM (HyperMemory)

The distinguishing feature of 'HyperMemory' cards is their use of ATi's HyperMemory technology. Otherwise, they are very similar to other budget-level suffixes such as 'SE' or 'LE.'

The Mhz of the core clock measures the rate at which the GPU processs, higher core clock in turn is a contributing factor to the clarity of the graffix due to faster processing, the loading of images, the differential of colors and shades, the sharpness, brightness, texture, motion, distance capture etc...

SE (Special Edition)

'SE' defines the bottom of the 'budget/value' segment for Radeon cards; it shares this segment with 'HyperMemory' cards, though 'SE' cards, unless marked as such, do not use HyperMemory technology.

LE (Limited Edition)

'LE' cards, like 'SE' cards, are designed around the lowest specifications in use for any particular graphics core. A video card line may come with an 'LE' card in the lineup, or an 'SE' card in the lineup, but never both; because of this, they can both be considered effectively the same.

GT (Gran Turismo)

'GT' cards are among the less powerful and expensive suffixes, though they are only applied to graphics cores designed for the enthusiast/performance segment, resulting in a card made for the mainstream segment.

RX

'RX' is identical to 'GT'; a company might produce a card and give it the 'RX' suffix, or the 'GT' suffix, and never sell cards using both labels; because of this, they can both be considered effectively the same.

(no suffix)

Contrary as to what it may imply, the lack of a suffix, for most modern video cards, does NOT indicate that it is the "default" model. Rather, it simply lies roughly in the middle in terms of performance and price.

GTO

Somewhat similar to the 'GT' suffix, 'GTO' cards feature an enthusiast/performance-level graphics core, with reduced specifications to result in a less-expensive/less-powerful card.

Pro

When originally used with cards such as the Radeon 9000pro and 9700pro, 'Pro' indicated the most powerful end of Radeon cards. However, since the 2004 introduction of the Radeon 9600XT and 9800XT, this has shifted over to be a less-powerful, less-expensive enthusiast/performance suffix.

XL

'XL' indicates an enthusiast/performance card, but one that is two or more steps from the top end of the segment.

XT (eXTreme)

The 'XT' suffix denotes the most powerful league of Radeon video cards; the only higher suffixes, 'XT PE' and 'XTX', are both derivatives of this suffix.

XT PE (eXTreme Platinum Edition)

The 'XT PE' suffix is only found in cards using ATi's most expensive, and powerful, graphics cores. It was replaced by the newer 'XTX' suffix in newer cards.

XTX

The 'XTX' suffix is only found in cards using ATi's most expensive, and powerful, graphics cores. It replaces the older 'XT PE' suffix.

See also