NVIDIA’s RTX 6000 Is A Workstation Behemoth With 18,176 Cores, 48 GB Memory, 91 TFLOPs Compute Horsepower, and 300W TBP at $7350 US
The NVIDIA RTX 6000 graphics card is aimed at the workstation segment and will utilize the Pro driver suite. It is not intended to be used for gaming though one can still game on it if they want since NVIDIA’s drivers are very flexible. One might easily get confused with the naming scheme of the new card but one should remember that the Ampere generation had an ‘A’ at the beginning of the model name whereas the Ada generation doesn’t feature any alphabets in the beginning. The card is simply called the RTX 6000 instead of the RTX A6000 (Last-gen). The specifications of the NVIDIA RTX 6000 are also better than the GeForce RTX 4090. It has just 2 SMs disabled at 142 which offer up to 18,176 CUDA cores. That’s 11% more cores & SMs than the RTX 4090 GPU. But NVIDIA surely has some room left for an even higher-end variant that will use those 2 remaining SM units. The card comes with a similar boost clock of 2.5 GHz and has double the VRAM capacity at 48 GB (EEC) versus the 24 GB featured on the RTX 4090. The card does use slower 20 Gbps GDDR6X memory dies versus the 21 Gbps dies featured on the gaming graphics card. As for performance, the NVIDIA RTX 6000 ‘Ada’ graphics card offers 91.1 TFLOPs of FP32, 210.6 TFLOPs of RT, and 1457 TFLOPs of Tensor core performance. While the RTX 4090 requires 450W TBP, the RTX 6000 is rated at just 300W, making it quite the efficiency powerhouse. But all of that extra prowess and workstation goodness comes at a cost. NVIDIA’s RTX 6000 graphics card is currently listed at ShopBLT in a PNY variant for $7350 US while the CompSource outlet has it listed for $8200 US. That’s almost 4.5x more expensive than the RTX 4090 graphics card. That’s also around 50-60% more expensive than its predecessor, the A6000 as it was priced around $4500-$5000 US.
NVIDIA Workstation Graphics Card Lineup:
News Source: Videocardz