🎮 Elevate Your Game—Where Performance Meets Affordability!
The SAPLOS Radeon RX 560 Graphics Card is a powerful 4GB GDDR5 GPU designed for gamers seeking high performance at a reasonable price. With 896 stream processors, a 1200 MHz GPU clock, and dual cooling fans, it ensures optimal performance and cooling. Its PCI Express 3.0 interface allows for easy installation, making it a perfect choice for both casual and competitive gamers looking to enhance their gaming experience.
Brand | SAPLOS |
Product Dimensions | 19.4 x 12.5 x 4.2 cm; 480 g |
Item model number | Radeon RX 560 |
Manufacturer | SAPLOS |
Series | AMD Radeon RX 560 |
Resolution | 4K Ultra HD MP |
Memory Clock Speed | 6000 GHz |
Graphics Coprocessor | AMD RX 560 |
Graphics Chipset Brand | AMD |
Graphics Card Description | Discrete Graphics Card |
Graphics RAM Type | GDDR5 |
Graphics Card Ram Size | 4.00 |
Graphics Card Interface | PCI-Express x8 |
Wattage | 60 watts |
Are Batteries Included | No |
Item Weight | 480 g |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
M**S
Fits like a glove 👌
Needed something for an older pc that would work well without to much bottlenecking. Lovely little card, and surprised how quite it is. Perfect, thanks
P**5
Works
Not the best card in the world, but it does a good job for the money.
R**R
It's great
Just what I needed good value for money
I**A
Works on macOS over Thunderbolt; performs worse than MBP2016's built-in RX 460
Given Saplos is an unknown vendor, I was hopeful, but not sure what to expect. This arrived today. This device has PCI vendor ID 0x1002 and device ID 0x67ef; subsystem vid 0x1002 pid 0x0b04. It worked in the Razer Core X enclosure on Macbook Pro 2016 out of the box.GLview.app mini benchmark produced lower FPS than with the built-in RX 460. Final Cut Pro gave no discernible boost on rendering performance. I haven't tested this on my PC, because the purpose of this purchase was to test Thunderbolt and to get a cheap, slight boost in performance specifically on the Mac -- but the latter goal has failed, and without testing on my PC without Thunderbolt's bottlenecks, I can't tell what happened. I have not connected an external display which may be a reason for the issues -- GPU has to send back the rendered image over Thunderbolt, eating away at the available bandwidth, so please take this result with a grain of salt. An upside is that this GPU doesn't require additional power beyond what it gets over PCIe slot. The purchase was worth the test whether my eGPU enclosure works before I spend more money on a better known brand.
A**Y
Probably received a refurbished one instead of new
Came in original packaging but the core clock and memory clock both were locked at 300Mhz for no reason. Had the same issue last year with rtx2060 and turned out the item was refurbished. I returned it tho
A**N
A perfectly adequate low-end graphics card suitable for unintensive games and office work.
I needed a new AMD graphics card for my elderly Linux PC as I was becoming phobic about facing a potential death-struggle with Nvidia graphics card drivers each time there was a Linux kernel upgrade, and the AMD graphics card I was using instead was older than the wheel (hence had no fan) and threw a fit if I did anything remotely graphics-intensive. Also, I wanted to occasionally run a game when the weather was too bad to do anything more useful. The Saplos Radeon RX 560 Graphics Card did the job; it runs quietly (you can hear the fan, but it didn't seem intrusive), it was easy to install and Fedora Linux and its upgrades so far have no problems with it.I don't know if this card would be suitable for an extreme gamer, but it's perfectly capable of dealing with slowish, albeit graphics-heavy, games like Cities:Skylines and copes with the usual office work (over Fedora/Gnome) just fine. It does dump out a bit more heat then I was used to, but I suppose that's expected when moving from 15+ year old graphics card to a modern one. I can't believe I managed to keep the previous graphics card running for so long; it was frantically overclocked and had old CPU fans tied to it with string to keep it cool. Honestly, what was I thinking... (oh yes, that was it - you couldn't get graphics cards for love nor money because the now-bust cryptominers had snaffled them all).
B**N
It works on Mac Pro 5,1 but without the boot screen
It worked right out of the box in a Mac Pro 5,1 (flashed Mac Pro 4,1), with a genuinely installed High Sierra MacOS 10.13.6 and its featured Boot ROM version, and with this GPU I was able to update the Boot ROM into 144.0.0.0.0, which enables a M.2 hard drive and an update to Mojave 10.14 (or pretty much any OS after that using various patches available online). Recommended GPU, but would have been nice to see the boot screen as well. However, there are ways to deal without it in various situations, and perhaps there's a way to "OpenCore" it, so you'll see the boot screen as well.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago