Monday, February 19th 2024

NVIDIA RTX 50-series "Blackwell" to Debut 16-pin PCIe Gen 6 Power Connector Standard

NVIDIA is reportedly looking to change the power connector standard for the fourth successive time in a span of three years, with its upcoming GeForce RTX 50-series "Blackwell" GPUs, Moore's Law is Dead reports. NVIDIA began its post 8-pin PCIe journey with the 12-pin Molex MicroFit connector for the GeForce RTX 3080 and RTX 3090 Founders Edition cards. The RTX 3090 Ti would go on to standardize the 12VHPWR connector, which the company would debut across a wider section of its GeForce RTX 40-series "Ada" product stack (all SKUs with TGP of over 200 W). In the face of rising complains of the reliability of 12VHPWR, some partner RTX 40-series cards are beginning to implement the pin-compatible but sturdier 12V-2x6. The implementation of the 16-pin PCIe Gen 6 connector would be the fourth power connector change, if the rumors are true. A different source says that rival AMD has no plans to change from the classic 8-pin PCIe power connectors.

Update 15:48 UTC: Our friends at Hardware Busters have reliable sources in the power supply industry with equal access to the PCIe CEM specification as NVIDIA, and say that the story of NVIDIA adopting a new power connector with "Blackwell" is likely false. NVIDIA is expected to debut the new GPU series toward the end of 2024, and if a new power connector was in the offing, by now the power supply industry would have some clue. It doesn't. Read more about this in the Hardware Busters article in the source link below.

Update Feb 20th: In an earlier version of the article, it was incorrectly reported that the "16-pin connector" is fundamentally different from the current 12V-2x6, with 16 pins dedicated to power delivery. We have since been corrected by Moore's Law is Dead, that it is in fact the same 12V-2x6, but with an updated PCIe 6.0 CEM specification.
Sources: Moore's Law is Dead, Hardware Busters
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106 Comments on NVIDIA RTX 50-series "Blackwell" to Debut 16-pin PCIe Gen 6 Power Connector Standard

#101
chrcoluk
Prima.Vera400W CPU + 800W GPU ... Future looks good /s


Ahmmm, NO.
Progress :)
Posted on Reply
#102
Totally
dgianstefaniProgress takes revision sometimes.

How many variants of form factor/connector did we use before settling on ATX, or USB, for example.

Besides, as people miss, this isn't NVIDIA making these connectors, it's PCI-SIG or other standardization consortiums.
Not like this, as for the examples you gave they were successive iterations not do overs because the previous attempt missed the mark.
Posted on Reply
#103
PheonixBlayne81
P4-630I won't be upgrading my GPU and PSU until GTA 6 is out for PC, so I'll see what connector we have then....Hopefully it's something better than there is now...
By the time GTA6 drops we'll probably be on the wireless standard with PCIe power delivery connection :roll:
Posted on Reply
#104
ChaoYYang0123
hahaha, I think it funny to see if there will be some people use two adapters for their brand new 50 series card
Posted on Reply
#105
P4-630
ChaoYYang0123hahaha, I think it funny to see if there will be some people use two adapters for their brand new 50 series card
Preferably 2 or 3-8 pins....
Posted on Reply
#106
x4it3n
P4-630Preferably 2 or 3-8 pins....
4x 8-pins for 600W and officially it could go up to 1200W if they are high quality cables since 8-pins PCIe cables are rated at 150W but can actually work fine with up to 300W (der8auer tested the cables).
Posted on Reply
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