Series of video cards
This article is about the GPU series announced in 2013. For the similarly named series, released in 2001 by ATI, see
Radeon R200 series.
Radeon 200 series |
Release date | October 8, 2013; 11 years ago (October 8, 2013) |
---|
Codename | - Southern Islands
- Sea Islands
- Volcanic Islands
|
---|
Architecture | |
---|
Transistors | - 370M (Caicos) 40 nm
- 950M (Oland) 28 nm
- 1.500M (Cape Verde) 28 nm
- 2.080M (Bonaire) 28 nm
- 2.800M (Pitcairn) 28 nm
- 4.313M (Tahiti) 28 nm
- 5.000M (Tonga) 28 nm
- 6.200M (Hawaii) 28 nm
- 2 x 6.200M (Vesuvius) 28 nm
|
---|
|
Entry-level | - Radeon R5 220
- Radeon R5 230
- Radeon R5 235
- Radeon R5 235X
- Radeon R5 240
- Radeon R7 240
- Radeon R7 250
- Radeon R7 250E
|
---|
Mid-range | - Radeon R7 250X
- Radeon R7 260
- Radeon R7 260X
- Radeon R7 265
- Radeon R9 270
- Radeon R9 270X
|
---|
High-end | - Radeon R9 280
- Radeon R9 280X
- Radeon R9 285
|
---|
Enthusiast | - Radeon R9 290
- Radeon R9 290X
- Radeon R9 295X2
|
---|
|
DirectX | |
---|
OpenCL | OpenCL 2.1 (GCN version) |
---|
OpenGL | OpenGL 4.5 (4.6 Windows 7+ and Adrenalin 18.4.1+)[1][2][3][4][5] |
---|
Vulkan | |
---|
|
Predecessor | |
---|
Successor | Radeon 300 series |
---|
|
Unsupported |
The Radeon 200 series is a series of graphics processors developed by AMD. These GPUs are manufactured on a 28 nm Gate-Last process through TSMC or Common Platform Alliance.[8]