Radeon R4 (Stoney Ridge) vs GeForce GTX 560 Ti OEM

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Primary details

GPU architecture, market segment, value for money and other general parameters compared.

Place in the rankingnot rated1137
Place by popularitynot in top-100not in top-100
Power efficiencyno data5.48
ArchitectureFermi 2.0 (2010−2014)GCN 1.2/2.0 (2015−2016)
GPU code nameGF114Stoney Ridge
Market segmentDesktopLaptop
Release date8 March 2011 (14 years ago)1 June 2016 (9 years ago)

Detailed specifications

General parameters such as number of shaders, GPU core base clock and boost clock speeds, manufacturing process, texturing and calculation speed. Note that power consumption of some graphics cards can well exceed their nominal TDP, especially when overclocked.

Pipelines / CUDA cores384192
Core clock speed823 MHzno data
Boost clock speedno data600 MHz
Number of transistors1,950 millionno data
Manufacturing process technology40 nm28 nm
Power consumption (TDP)170 Watt15 Watt
Texture fill rate52.67no data
Floating-point processing power1.263 TFLOPSno data
ROPs32no data
TMUs64no data
L1 Cache512 KBno data
L2 Cache512 KBno data

Form factor & compatibility

Information on compatibility with other computer components. Useful when choosing a future computer configuration or upgrading an existing one. For desktop graphics cards it's interface and bus (motherboard compatibility), additional power connectors (power supply compatibility).

InterfacePCIe 2.0 x16no data
Length229 mmno data
Width2-slotno data
Supplementary power connectors2x 6-pinno data

VRAM capacity and type

Parameters of VRAM installed: its type, size, bus, clock and resulting bandwidth. Integrated GPUs have no dedicated video RAM and use a shared part of system RAM.

Memory typeGDDR5no data
Maximum RAM amount1 GBno data
Memory bus width256 Bit64 Bit
Memory clock speed1002 MHzno data
Memory bandwidth128.3 GB/sno data
Shared memory-+

Connectivity and outputs

This section shows the types and number of video connectors on each GPU. The data applies specifically to desktop reference models (for example, NVIDIA’s Founders Edition). OEM partners often modify both the number and types of ports. On notebook GPUs, video‐output options are determined by the laptop’s design rather than the graphics chip itself.

Display Connectors2x DVI, 1x mini-HDMIno data
HDMI+-

API and SDK support

List of supported 3D and general-purpose computing APIs, including their specific versions.

DirectX12 (11_0)12 (FL 12_0)
Shader Model5.1no data
OpenGL4.6no data
OpenCL1.1no data
VulkanN/A-
CUDA2.1-

Pros & cons summary


Recency 8 March 2011 1 June 2016
Chip lithography 40 nm 28 nm
Power consumption (TDP) 170 Watt 15 Watt

R4 (Stoney Ridge) has an age advantage of 5 years, a 42.9% more advanced lithography process, and 1033.3% lower power consumption.

We couldn't decide between GeForce GTX 560 Ti OEM and Radeon R4 (Stoney Ridge). We've got no test results to judge.

Be aware that GeForce GTX 560 Ti OEM is a desktop graphics card while Radeon R4 (Stoney Ridge) is a notebook one.

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NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti OEM
GeForce GTX 560 Ti OEM
AMD Radeon R4 (Stoney Ridge)
Radeon R4 (Stoney Ridge)

Other comparisons

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Community ratings

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4.5 8 votes

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2.9 128 votes

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