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Sapphire RX 580 Comparison – Pulse vs Nitro+!

Nvidia's RTX 20 series may be just weeks away, but if you want a mid-range graphics card from AMD, then the RX 580 is still your best bet. For this article, Sapphire sent us two of its aftermarket RX 580 8GB cards – the Pulse and the Nitro+. Our aim? To compare the two cards and see what you gain (or lose) by going for one over the other. Lets see how they stack up against each other.

If you are looking for an aftermarket RX 580 right now, you will find plenty of options, including a selection of 4GB and 8GB models. How do you know which to go for, when pricing can vary significantly between cards? Sapphire wants to make this process a bit easier for you by comparing its Pulse 8GB and Nitro+ 8GB  RX 580 cards head-to-head.

At the time of writing, the Pulse 8GB can be found for £260, while the Nitro+ retails for £299. We look at the differences between the two cards in terms of feature set, build and aesthetics, as well as performance.

Watch via Vimeo (below) or over on YouTube at 2160p HERE

 RX 580 8GB Pulse  RX 580 8GB Nitro+
 Clock Speed  1366MHz boost  1411MHz boost
 Memory Speed  2000MHz (8000MHz effective)  2000MHz (8000MHz effective)
 Memory Bandwidth  256GB/s  256GB/s
 Bus Width  256-bit  256-bit
 Form-factor  2-slot  2.2-slot
 Dimensions  230 X 125 X 40mm  260 X 135 X 43mm
 Display Outputs 1x DL-DVI-D
2x HDMI 2.0b
2x DisplayPort 1.4
1x DL-DVI-D
2x HDMI 2.0b
2x DisplayPort 1.4
 Power Consumption  <225W  <235W
 Power Requirement  1 x 8-pin 1 x 8-pin + 1 x 6-pin

Pulse on the left, Nitro+ on the right

As you can see from the spec comparison table, and the GPU-Z screenshots above, core specification is almost identical between the two cards – they are, after all, both RX 580s. This means both have 2304 stream processors, 8GB GDDR5 VRAM, a 256-bit memory bus and so on. The only difference here is the rated boost clock – the Pulse card runs up to 1366MHz, whereas the Nitro+ is slightly faster at up to 1411MHz.

There are more differences when we compare the cards' features, however. The Pulse card is the cheaper unit, so it lacks a few features included with the Nitro+. These include:

Some of those may not bother you – ‘Robust VRM cooling' for instance, only means to suggest that the Nitro+ has a superior VRM cooling solution, when (as we will look at on the next page) the Pulse is still perfectly fine in this regard. Dual-BIOS functionality is something I am appreciative of, though, as it means you have a fall-back in case you brick the card's primary BIOS.

RGB fiends among you will also be disappointed to discover the Pulse does not have a single bit of lighting – anywhere! If you want to colour-match your graphics card to the rest of your system, the Nitro+ is the card to get.

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