![his iceq driver his iceq driver](https://www.nodevice.com/static/device_images/o/679/22e/67922e142fa88413f867fb9ab23233f1a50e5334.jpg)
Also, it would have been preferable for the memory chips to be covered by the heatsink as well. Indeed, it’s markedly quieter when under load but it would’ve been nice if the fan could completely shut down when the card is idle. Not that it’s louder than the stock cooler. The slow speed of the fan also keeps noise to a minimum, though the fact that it isn’t variable means it’s never quite silent.
![his iceq driver his iceq driver](https://www.nodevice.com/static/device_images/o/6c0/344/6c034478d7dcf2f60131bbd0260a7f3d7709d42f.jpg)
This does require the cooler to be double height but it ensures hot air isn’t trapped inside the case like it is on the single slot cooler used on ATI’s reference card. A large fan at the back blows air across an all-aluminium heatsink and expels it out the back through the grilled expansion card plate. The design is really as simple as it gets. HIS has been using Arctic Cooling coolers for a number of years now and largely with great success.
![his iceq driver his iceq driver](https://www.nodevice.com/static/device_images/o/a07/d4f/a07d4fd53467d97de95549ce21c558c02c55e5f8.jpg)
What’s of more interest is the Arctic Cooling HeatSink and Fan (HSF). The card itself uses HIS’ signature blue PCB, which does little besides look a bit different.
![his iceq driver his iceq driver](https://www.nodevice.es/static/device_images/o/53a/957/53a957615c43a51f16e0cf3cd1c91a22be9bd81f.jpg)
#His iceq driver free#
It’s worth noting, though, that you very seldom get free games with sub-£100 graphics cards so the absence of one here is nothing out of the ordinary. So, it’s clear the bundle is not going to be the deciding factor in opting for this card over any other.
#His iceq driver driver#
The bundle is about as basic as you can get with just a driver CD, DVI-to-HDMI and DVI-to-VGA dongles, and a quick installation guide that consists of a single page (in multiple languages) of generic card installation instructions. The HIS HD 4670 IceQ Turbo, then, takes the basic formula of the HD 4670 and adds a different cooler, overclocks things a little, and tweaks the output configuration. As was usually the case, Crysis proved more taxing than the other games on test so you can expect to be playing this game at medium detail settings or at a lower resolution if you want decent framerates. That lot will set you back about £65 and in our previous testing we found it was a perfect match for those looking to play their games at high-quality settings on monitors with resolutions of 1,680 x 1,050 (the resolution most 22 and 20in widescreen monitors use) or lower.
#His iceq driver full#
You can read the full low-down on the technology used in the chip at the heart of the HD 4670 card here but in summary it contains 320 Stream Processors, 8 ROPs, 32 texture units, and comes clocked at 750MHz with GDDR3 memory running at around 1,000MHz (effectively 2,000MHz). It combined a healthy dose of performance with low power consumption, a plentiful feature set and a low price that we felt made it a great entry-level card for those that fancied boosting their computer’s graphics without breaking the bank. However, every now and then we come across a card that stands out from the crowd, such as this HIS 4670 I’m looking at today.Īs the name suggests, it’s based on ATI’s HD 4670 card, which really impressed us, even as a standard card. This is because so many of the manufacturing partners use the ATI or nVidia reference design for their cards, which leaves little room for any difference in performance, whether that be thermal, acoustic or computational. More often than not, we take the view that once you’ve decided on the graphics chip you want, the choice of which actual card to pick can pretty much come down to what game it comes bundled with, and of course price.