Friday, August 14th 2020

Micron Confirms Next-Gen NVIDIA Ampere Memory Specifications - 12 GB GDDR6X, 1 TB/s Bandwidth

Micron have spilled the beans on at least some specifications for NVIDIA's next-gen Ampere graphics cards. In a new tech brief posted by the company earlier this week, hidden away behind Micron's market outlook, strategy and positioning, lie some secrets NVIDIA might not be too keen to see divulged before their #theultimatecountdown event.

Under a comparison on ultra bandwidth solutions, segregated into the GDDR6X column, Micron lists a next-gen NVIDIA card under the "RTX 3090" product name. According to the spec sheet, this card features a total memory capacity of 12 GB GDDR6X, achieved through 12 memory chips with a 384-bit wide memory bus. As we saw today, only 11 of these seem to be populated on the RTX 3090, which, when paired with specifications for the GDDR6X memory chips being capable of 19-21 Gbps speeds, brings total memory subsystem bandwidth towards the 912 - 1008 GB/s range (using 12 chips; 11 chips results in 836 GB/s minimum). It's possible the RTX 3090 product name isn't an official NVIDIA product, but rather a Micron-guessed possibility, so don't look at it as factual representation of an upcoming graphics card. One other interesting aspect from the tech brief is that Micron expects their GDDR6X technology to enable 16 Gb (or 2 GB) density chips with 24 Gbps bandwidth, as early as 2021. You can read over the tech brief - which mentions NVIDIA by name as a development partner for GDDR6X - by following the source link and clicking on the "The Demand for Ultra-Bandwidth Solutions" document.
Source: Micron
Add your own comment

53 Comments on Micron Confirms Next-Gen NVIDIA Ampere Memory Specifications - 12 GB GDDR6X, 1 TB/s Bandwidth

#51
Vayra86
EarthDogThanks for the link... looks like gddr5 had some issues? Gddr5x was fine?
What? The title even says gddr5x

I stand corrected. Reading into it - my memory was also hazy on it. I initially did buy the 1070, and did update this specific Vbios, returned it shortly after (EVGA FTW) and got the 1080.

EDIT: corrected previous posts.
Posted on Reply
#52
EarthDog
Vayra86What? The title even says gddr5x
Did you read the thread? :)

From the op of your link.. and look at the post above that one.
The article blatantly states there is a bug with the Micron GDDR5 memory only, the 1070s use either the Samsung, or Micron GDDR5 memory... The 1080's will not be affected, as they use totally different GDDR5X Micron memory.....thank god. Nvidia has already stated they are aware of a issue surrounding the GDDR5 Micron memory on the 1070s, and a new Vbios will be launched to all vendors to fix the issue.
Anyway, ty.. i didn't know gddr5 had issues. Lol
Posted on Reply
#53
fritolayduck
RoutedScripterYeah, I have RX480 with 8GB, there's no way I'm changing it unless it has at least 12 or more.




That's where you're wrong, see games do require a lot more, they just have to resort to annoying streaming, and streaming textures is very inconsitently developed so the experiences vary a lot how much effort a dev put into that system. One of the simulator games I play takes a lot of RAM/VRAM and streaming isn't perfect, if we had all that in RAM it be no problem.

What about VR and huge resolutions like Varjo HMDs ...

Ultra high resolution is eventually what will replace anti-aliasing as the proper thing to get rid of rough edges, probably equally or even more demanding as AA.
RT consumes a lot of memory too
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Dec 4th, 2024 03:19 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts