Oddly enough, I can't seem to get the exact model from dxdiag or Control Panel. Been awhile since I installed it. My guess is that it was on the cheaper end of this model line.
Here's a screen-cap. I'm fairly sure that every other system I've had (most of which, I've built myself) would display the exact model here, and not simply a generic series, but perhaps my memory is off:
I did update my drivers for Gridcoin, so it is possible it was displaying the correct model before. However, I did not think to check.
I'm fairly sure that every other system I've had (most of which, I've built myself) would display the exact model here
This is what I am used to as well, rather than an entire series being listed. I had a quick look at the R7 200 series on Wikipedia and it includes models from utterly useless to ones able to compete with the lower end of the current GeForce 10 series. Very strange.
You could just open the case and read the model directly off the card.
Oddly enough, I can't seem to get the exact model from dxdiag or Control Panel. Been awhile since I installed it. My guess is that it was on the cheaper end of this model line.
That's very strange. What does the display page of dxdiag tell you?
Here's a screen-cap. I'm fairly sure that every other system I've had (most of which, I've built myself) would display the exact model here, and not simply a generic series, but perhaps my memory is off:
I did update my drivers for Gridcoin, so it is possible it was displaying the correct model before. However, I did not think to check.
This is what I am used to as well, rather than an entire series being listed. I had a quick look at the R7 200 series on Wikipedia and it includes models from utterly useless to ones able to compete with the lower end of the current GeForce 10 series. Very strange.
You could just open the case and read the model directly off the card.
I suspect that would only reveal my system as a paper tiger with one of those "useless" models. It's fine with things like Civ 6, at least.