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AMD Radeon Pro WX 8200 review – Benchmarks and exclusive hardware details

With the Radeon Pro WX 8200, AMD is pushing a new workstation graphics card with Vega56, which is located below the Radeon Pro WX 9100 and Frontier Edition (both Vega64). But I not only set the map, but also disassembled it and measured a lot in the lab. With very interesting insights!

Temperature gradients and boost clock in detail

The cooler does its name well and keeps the card at least exactly at the specified temperature limit of 79 to 80°C. This, by the way, in an open structure and in the closed housing, because one relies on a DHE solution, which dissipates the complete waste heat via the slot panel outwards. That's why I only recorded the measurements once as a curve and value table. The differences are simply marginal and can only be identified, if at all, in infrared analysis.

During the stress test, the clock rates break down more easily during the course of heating, only to stabilize a little higher later on. If we look at the fan curves later, we will be able to observe analog behavior.

And now the whole thing again in sober numbers in table form:

Initial
Radeon Pro WX 8200
Final value
Radeon Pro WX 8200
Open Benchtable
GPU Temperatures
35 °C 79 to 80 °C
GPU clock 1319 MHz 1276 MHz
Ambient temperature 22 °C 22 °C
Closed Case
GPU Temperatures
35 °C 79 to 80 °C
GPU clock 1319 MHz 1276 MHz
Air temperature in the housing 25°C 27°C

 

Board Analysis: Infrared Images

The following image gallery shows all infrared images for the gaming and the torture loop in the open structure and in the closed case. The differences between the two superstructures are hardly visible and lie with a delta of approx. to a degree.

 

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About the author

Igor Wallossek

Editor-in-chief and name-giver of igor'sLAB as the content successor of Tom's Hardware Germany, whose license was returned in June 2019 in order to better meet the qualitative demands of web content and challenges of new media such as YouTube with its own channel.

Computer nerd since 1983, audio freak since 1979 and pretty much open to anything with a plug or battery for over 50 years.

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