The Quadro RTX 3000 Max-Q is a professional mobile graphics chip by NVIDIA, launched on May 27th, 2019. Built on the 12 nm process, and based on the TU106 graphics processor, the chip supports DirectX 12 Ultimate. The TU106 graphics processor is a large chip with a die area of 445 mm² and 10,800 million transistors. Unlike the fully unlocked GeForce RTX 2070, which uses the same GPU but has all 2304 shaders enabled, NVIDIA has disabled some shading units on the Quadro RTX 3000 Max-Q to reach the product's target shader count. It features 1920 shading units, 120 texture mapping units, and 64 ROPs. Also included are 240 tensor cores which help improve the speed of machine learning applications. The card also has 30 raytracing acceleration cores. NVIDIA has paired 6 GB GDDR6 memory with the Quadro RTX 3000 Max-Q, which are connected using a 192-bit memory interface. The GPU is operating at a frequency of 600 MHz, which can be boosted up to 1215 MHz, memory is running at 1500 MHz (12 Gbps effective). Its power draw is rated at 60 W maximum. This device has no display connectivity, as it is not designed to have monitors connected to it. Rather it is intended for use in laptop/notebooks and will use the output of the host mobile device. Quadro RTX 3000 Max-Q is connected to the rest of the system using a PCI-Express 3.0 x16 interface.