Monday, September 5th 2022
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 Comes in 12GB and 16GB Variants
NVIDIA's upcoming GeForce RTX 4080 "Ada," a successor to the RTX 3080 "Ampere," reportedly comes in two distinct variants based on memory size, memory bus width, and possibly even core-configuration. MEGAsizeGPU reports that they have seen two reference designs for the RTX 4080, one with 12 GB of memory and a 10-layer PCB, and the other with 16 GB of memory and a 12-layer PCB. Increasing numbers of PCB layers enable greater density of wiring around the ASIC. At debut, the flagship product from NVIDIA is expected to be the RTX 4090, with its 24 GB memory size, and 14-layer PCB. Apparently, the 12 GB and 16 GB variants of the RTX 4080 feature vastly different PCB designs.
We've known from past attempts at memory-based variants, such as the GTX 1060 (3 GB vs. 6 GB), or the more recent RTX 3080 (10 GB vs. 12 GB), that NVIDIA turns to other levers to differentiate variants, such as core-configuration (numbers of available CUDA cores), and the same is highly likely with the RTX 4080. The RTX 4080 12 GB, RTX 4080 16 GB, and the RTX 4090, could be NVIDIA's answers to AMD's RDNA3-based successors of the RX 6800, RX 6800 XT, and RX 6950 XT, respectively.
Sources:
Wccftech, MEGAsizeGPU (Twitter)
We've known from past attempts at memory-based variants, such as the GTX 1060 (3 GB vs. 6 GB), or the more recent RTX 3080 (10 GB vs. 12 GB), that NVIDIA turns to other levers to differentiate variants, such as core-configuration (numbers of available CUDA cores), and the same is highly likely with the RTX 4080. The RTX 4080 12 GB, RTX 4080 16 GB, and the RTX 4090, could be NVIDIA's answers to AMD's RDNA3-based successors of the RX 6800, RX 6800 XT, and RX 6950 XT, respectively.
61 Comments on NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 Comes in 12GB and 16GB Variants
4085-16GB?
As always, thank you for ruining it with your stupidity nVidia, AIB's could actually at one point in time offer models with more VRAM. I don't always play the latest AAA, but I do mod old games to the brim and I need it all.
I may very well just sit on my 1080 Ti another generation. Still performs excellently in every game and doesn't chug power. Those prices would not work with a competitive AMD and in the current market.
I'm not loyal to either 'Nvgreedia' or 'AMgreeD' lol, both of them want my money pretty badly so let the best product (for me) win.
12GB GPU, sure, 16GB RAM, sure. That's where its at right now and for this coming console gen, at best. 32 is only needed if you do more and its not gaming.
There is typically a ebb and flow to arguments around VRAM sizes. That said we are at a point where Nvidia has kept the $700 price point at or below 12 GB (went from 11GB to 8GB to 11GB and now to 12GB) for four GPU generations. That is unprecedented stagnation in regards to VRAM size at this price point.