In fairness to Gigabyte, the GV-R485MC-1GH behaved during a run of 3DMark Vantage, but the levels of heat coming from the cooler were terrifying, and we didn’t have the heart to wait for a blue screen to occur. In a matter of moments, we had a £12 Noctua NF S12 case fan installed, and the temperature dropped to a constant 50°. Although the Noctua is relatively cheap and quiet, you may struggle to mount a case fan to blow on your graphics card unless you can install it in the side panel of your case.
GPU Temperature Results

Chip surface temperature in Degrees Celcius

Once we had the Gigabyte under control, we got busy overclocking it and found that the Automated Clock Configuration utility in the Overdrive section of the Catalyst drivers allowed us to crank up the speeds to 725MHz/1150MHz (equivalent to 2300MHz). This was higher than the 690MHz/2286MHz that was allowed with the stock HD 4850 and it shows that the Samsung K4J10324QD-HJ1A memory will run significantly faster than its rated speed of 1000MHz.
The difference in performance between the two cards was minimal in 3DMark06 and 3DMark Vantage. The Gigabyte has a significantly better frame rate than the stock card in Far Cry 2 when you crank up the anti-aliasing but you're actually seeing the benefit of 1GB of memory compared with just 512MB on the stock card.
All in all, the Gigabyte HD 4850 has the same performance as a regular HD 4850 and it overclocks in much the same way, but the passive cooler is very bulky and you need to give some thought to cooling to make the system work.
Verdict
The Gigabyte R485MC-1GH is a reference HD 4850 with a socking great passive cooler. We feel that a case fan is an essential extra, so you’re paying at least £30 for the privilege solely of moving the heat around inside the case of your PC. ®
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COMMENTS
Doh!!!
The heat should be vented **out** of the case and **not into** the case!
@Steven Walker
The 'damn good value at £125' comment refers to a reference Radeon HD 4850
The verdict and review deal with the passively cooled Gigabyte
@Simon Brown
I've an old NVidia 7600 fanless that will do that for you, and more, on two monitors -- installing that in a DAW is a pointless waste of power for the uses you state...
@Ken
The power figures are for the whole system apart from the display, and not just the graphics card
Points of order
1) An Accelero S1 gives better cooling, much better than the crap stock cooler, so contrary to what this review says it is eminently possible to passively cool a 4850 with great benefit both to temperatures and noise.
2) As others have said there are plenty reasons to want a silent graphics card, even aside from the fact that stock graphics coolers are frequently the loudest part of any moderately powerful system. Some of us like our PC's to be as quiet as possible regardless of their application. If you can tolerate noisy components then lucky you - some of us can't.
3) Gigabyte probably slowed the RAM down on this card because they haven't bothered cooling it properly, and the RAM on 4850s under load gets very hot indeed.




