PC & Computers

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Ti and GA102 “Ampere” Specs Revealed

This could be one of the most anticipated releases of the year. If Nvidia is able to deliver with its GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, it could be an unwinnable race for AMD. We will have to wait and see.

Taken from TPU … PC hardware focused YouTube channel Moore’s Law is Dead published a juicy tech-spec reveal of NVIDIA’s next-generation “Ampere” based flagship consumer graphics card, the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, citing correspondence with sources within NVIDIA. The report talks of big changes to NVIDIA’s Founders Edition (reference) board design, as well as what’s on the silicon. To begin with, the RTX 3080 Ti reference-design card features a triple-fan cooling solution unlike the RTX 20-series. This cooler is reportedly quieter than the RTX 2080 Ti FE cooling solution. The card pulls power from a pair of 8-pin PCIe power connectors. Display outputs include three DP, and one each of HDMI and VirtualLink USB-C. The source confirms that “Ampere” will implement PCI-Express gen 4.0 x16 host interface.

With “Ampere,” NVIDIA is developing three tiers of high-end GPUs, with the “GA102” leading the pack and succeeding the “TU102,” the “GA104” holding the upper-performance segment and succeeding today’s “TU104,” but a new silicon between the two, codenamed “GA103,” with no predecessor from the current-generation. The “GA102” reportedly features 5,376 “Ampere” CUDA cores (up to 10% higher IPC than “Turing”). The silicon also taps into the rumored 7 nm-class silicon fabrication node to dial up GPU clock speeds well above 2.20 GHz even for the “GA102.” Smaller chips in the series can boost beyond 2.50 GHz, according to the report. Even with the “GA102” being slightly cut-down for the RTX 3080 Ti, the silicon could end up with FP32 compute performance in excess of 21 TFLOPs. The card uses faster 18 Gbps GDDR6 memory, ending up with 863 GB/s of memory bandwidth that’s 40% higher than that of the RTX 2080 Ti (if the memory bus width ends up 384-bit). Below are screengrabs from the Moore’s Law is Dead video presentation, and not NVIDIA slides.

Read the rest at TPU

 

 

 

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