Tuesday, September 20th 2022

INNO3D GeForce RTX 40-series is Here: RTX 4090 and RTX 4080

INNO3D, a leading manufacturer of pioneering high-end multimedia components and innovations proudly announces the highly anticipated INNO3D GeForce RTX 40 Series comprising of RTX 4090, RTX 4080 16 GB and RTX 4080 12 GB. While super high performance can be expected from the next generation INNO3D graphics cards using Ada architecture, the design of each of the models from INNO3D X3/OC to iCHILL Frostbite, Black and iCHILL X3 have some serious upgrades that are both cosmetic and performance enhancing.

Founded in 1998 with the vision of developing pioneering computer hardware products on a global scale. Fast forward to the present day, INNO3D is now well-established in the gaming community known for our innovative and daring approach to design and technology. We are Brutal by Nature in everything we do and are 201% committed to you for the best gaming experience in the world.
Powered by the new ultra-efficient NVIDIA Ada Lovelace architecture, the 3rd generation of RTX, GeForce RTX 40 Series graphics cards are beyond fast, giving gamers and creators a quantum leap in performance, neural rendering, and many more leading platform capabilities. This massive advancement in GPU technology is the gateway to the most immersive gaming experiences, incredible AI features and the fastest content creation workflows. These GPUs push state-of-the-art graphics into the future.

Products Available Soon
  • RTX 4090/4080 16 GB ICHILL FROSTBITE
  • RTX 4090/4080 16 GB ICHILL BLACK
  • RTX 4090 ICHILL X3
  • RTX 4080 16 GB/12 GB ICHILL X3
  • RTX 4090 INNO3D X3, X3OC
Extreme Cooling With iCHILL Frostbite
With extreme power comes extreme cooling so we've paired the RTX 4090 with our iCHILL Frostbite, our flagship model to bring you the ultimate performance. The design of the cooler allowed the components to be closer by reducing the thickness of the thermal pads. By using software to simulate how the water flowed, it allowed better more efficient design which also incorporates digital aRGB LEDs to give not only functional but cosmetic improvements to the Frostbite. As with previous version the Frostbite uses copper in its water coolers that are nickel-plated which increased the acid resistance and stops the nickel plating from peeling off. To finish off the design, the Frostbite features patented sealing screws which are flush with the surface of the terminal and the cover in Frostbite design is embedded in the acrylic block.

Clean And Sleek iCHILL Black
The new GeForce RTX 4090 and RTX 4080 16 GB iCHILL BLACK is built with a hybrid cooling solution that give you silent air flow with high performance water-cooling. The new iCHILL Black fashions a cleaner look with straight lines and edges while providing cooling performance with its updated AIO and radiator design.

Even the fan blades have been designed so that INNO3D fans can enjoy extreme gaming with guaranteed efficient cooling with focused air flow and thus a high static pressure even with increased air resistance. A lot of new technology has been crammed into this neat clean block of a cooler.

Disco iCHILL X3
The iCHILL X3's first impression is the RGB design elements that have been placed at different parts of the cooler using even more radical designs than previous versions. Using a unique logo repeating pattern combined with a type of hexo-triangular pattern, the card looks like it wants to dance and bring the party to the rest of the models. It comes with RGB with support for Aura Sync, Mystic Light, Polychrome and RGB Fusion so it's compatible with most motherboard LED lighting software control.

Huge triple 98 mm scythe blades are present to maximise airflow and is optimised to operate in low fan speed condition that is helped with a large vapour chamber to improve thermal conductivity. The heatsink design also protects the PCB from bending with its die casting metal base. The technology beneath this lies 9 heatpipes that has a total length of 2704 mm and a surface area of 905637 mm² for the RTX 4090. Standard with all our high-end graphics cards will come with a functionally engineered backplate to release hot air with its openings under when required under extreme loading.

No Nonsense Industrious X3/OC
We presented the design for the GeForce RTX 3090 Ti XC/OC with great success and extended this to the new RTX 40 Series with subtle but significant design upgrades that equates to this beast of a graphics card. This really needed to look the part considering the power of the RTX 4090. The RTX 4090 has a mammoth length of 336 mm and 145 mm height and taking over 3 slots, only a triple 98 mm scythe fan blades is up to the job of keeping this card cool, this is achieved with its huge vapour chamber and die casting metal base heatsink design comprising of 9 heatpipes for controlled cooling at optimal levels.

The X3/OC provides maximum performance for the most hardcore of gamers with its factory overclocking that's ready for battle straight out of the box. Every single design detail has been implemented so that it has the best hot air extraction and release technology including the backplate with openings. For card operation stability the X3/OC has anticlockwise fan rotation for the outer fans while the central fan spins clockwise to counter turbulence under extreme gaming conditions.

More Brutal Than Ever
From INNO3D to iCHILL models we have stepped up our game with the design and performance so that there is evidence of continuation and evolution of our ethos and product design with significant design upgrades applied to INNO3D and iCHILL models. With each of these models we are proud to announce these are some of the best designs to come out of our R&D factory and we know we'll be seeing many PC mods showcasing these on social channels. The heart and effort didn't stop there, the artworks and creative assets including retail boxes were designed to support Brutal by Nature and what it represents to remind everyone that INNO3D is forever innovating and expanding our brand, daring and will push boundaries. This is very typical of our DNA as we will challenge ourselves to in order to be the best, the top of the food chain, the apex predator - be Brutal by Nature.

INNO3D continues to make amazing products through years of R&D, relentlessly pushing boundaries with innovative designs establishing ourselves as a top player in the graphics industry. INNO3D's need for perfection and brutal attitude to create the best product has meant our community of gamers stay loyal and purchase every next generations new graphics card. This is thanks to the high performance gaming, outstanding temperature control and super quite cooling that our new graphics card delivers.
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14 Comments on INNO3D GeForce RTX 40-series is Here: RTX 4090 and RTX 4080

#1
ZoneDymo
the hell is going on in picture 2 and 3?
Posted on Reply
#2
Tek-Check
ZoneDymothe hell is going on in picture 2 and 3?
There are no DisplayPort 2.0 on such expensive cards. That's what is going on.
Posted on Reply
#3
cvaldes
Tek-CheckThere are no DisplayPort 2.0 on such expensive cards. That's what is going on.
My guess is that some of these cards are undergoing certification which isn't complete so the manufacturers can't publish it.

When the 4090 products start shipping, we'll see if any of them have qualified DP2.0 certification. It's not like they are being loaded onto a FedEx truck right now.
Posted on Reply
#4
Tek-Check
cvaldesMy guess is that some of these cards are undergoing certification which isn't complete so the manufacturers can't publish it.
MSI published the spec in the other article. It's DP 1.4. No one has even mentioned that they work on enabling DP 2.0.
It's too important information to miss. Vendors are free to say that DP 2.0 ports could be enabled or are under certification process. That would increase the atractiveness of those cards. There is an odd silence across ALL 4000 series vendors about DP 2.0.
Posted on Reply
#5
cvaldes
Tek-CheckMSI published the spec in the other article. It's DP 1.4. No one has even mentioned that they work on enabling DP 2.0.
That's smart. Under promise, over deliver.

Good way to operate in life in general, not just as an AIB partner for discrete PC graphics cards.
Posted on Reply
#6
Tek-Check
cvaldesThat's smart. Under promise, over deliver.

Good way to operate in life in general, not just as an AIB partner for discrete PC graphics cards.
You cannot over deliver if there are no plans for it.
Posted on Reply
#7
cvaldes
Hmmm, so they listed the current approved specification.

Their marketing department did a great job! No one in the corporate legal department will get upset.
Posted on Reply
#8
Vayra86
Tek-CheckThere are no DisplayPort 2.0 on such expensive cards. That's what is going on.
I like you already. :D Every ADA topic lmao

Keep rubbing it in though, this is a major misfire and it needs attention, especially if competitors DO get it.
cvaldesHmmm, so they listed the current approved specification.

Their marketing department did a great job! No one in the corporate legal department will get upset.
Yep, no 3.5 GB issue here, but no DP 2.0 either.
Posted on Reply
#9
Tek-Check
Vayra86Keep rubbing it in though, this is a major misfire and it needs attention, especially if competitors DO get it.
Intel's lowest A380 card has DP 2.0 port at 40 Gbps. How difficult it could be for Nvidia to install one?

RDNA3 cards will have it. We know there are open sources patches for 80 Gbps signal.

$1600 Nvidia cards do not have DP 2.0 ports. Think this is disgraceful for super expensive products and they should receive gar criticism for it.
Posted on Reply
#10
Chomiq
Tek-CheckIntel's lowest A380 card has DP 2.0 port at 40 Gbps. How difficult it could be for Nvidia to install one?

RDNA3 cards will have it. We know there are open sources patches for 80 Gbps signal.

$1600 Nvidia cards do not have DP 2.0 ports. Think this is disgraceful for super expensive products and they should receive gar criticism for it.
There are 0 displayport 2.0 displays out there.

DP 2.0 is 80 Gbps, if Intel calls it 2.0 when it's running at half the bandwidth that's pure bs.
Posted on Reply
#11
Tek-Check
ChomiqThere are 0 displayport 2.0 displays out there.

DP 2.0 is 80 Gbps, if Intel calls it 2.0 when it's running at half the bandwidth that's pure bs.
Dude, how about you getting informed a little bit in the first place, showing some curiosity and asking questions? Or would you rather stay ignorant, yet strong in posting inaccurate opinions? The choice is yours.

Monitors with DP 2.0 are being validated and certified as we speak. Those will come out shortly. What you said was a bad case to defend Nvidia's unacceptable omission of DP 2.0 ports in super expensive 4000 cards.

I have patience and want you to know the context, so that you have an access to more information to shape your judgements. A bit of history.

LG was the first company to introduce HDMI 2.1 ports at 48 Gbps on their 9th series of 4K/120 HDR TVs in 2019. There were no video sources for that kind of signal for more than a year after TVs were released, until RTX 3000 cards and consoles finally came out in fall 2020 with HDMI 2.1 ports. New era of conse and PC gaming on giant 4K OLED TVs started.

If we follow your logic, LG was not supposed to innovate HDMI ports because there was nothing on the market to give those TVs 4K/120 HDR image. If there are no sources, why should LG offer TVs with more expensive 48 Gbps ports? Fair point, but very uninspiring for any innovation and development. If no one offers new tech, there is stagnation. Got it?

It's a silly thing to suggest that GPU vendor shouldn't offer better ports because there are no monitors on the market yet. It is GPU that must offer latest ports in order to motivate monitor makers to develop better displays that use high bandwidth data for better quality images.

If DP 2.0 is not in offer in the mainstream, we will have continuous flood of gigantic 4K OLED TVs in PC space and real HDR monitors will continue to be super expensive and niche. Just look at Asus ProArt monitors, how ridiculously expensive those are. It doesn't need to be this way. High end HDR TVs are often three times more cheap than HDR monitors. Those monitors need to come to mainstream, become less expensive, and one way to do it is to offer DP 2.0 ports for high data transfer to drive better images and colours on high resolution displays. HDR alone adds 25% of bandwidth into video signal.

Someone needs to be the first to offer new tech, so that others can be inspired to develop better devices to match new tech. Nvidia would not be the first company to offer DP 2.0, but now it will be the last for sure.

The first was AMD with Rembrandt laptops. Those APUs have officially certified DP 2.0 port at 40 Gbps by VESA. Then Intel came into the game with 40 Gbps ports on ARC GPUs. RDNA3 cards from AMD will follow in November with 80 Gbpa ports. Adoption rate grows steadily across vendors. Nvidia will be the last graphics company to adopt the new port, in 5000 series. If you want DP 2.0 from Nvidia, you will have to wait until 2024.

Finally, Intel's DP 2.0 port at 40 Gbps is one of three officially supported speeds in DP 2.0 spec. Vendors have freedom to install whichever they choose. You can certify DP 2.0 ports with VESA either for UHBR10 40 Gbps or UHBR20 at 80 Gbps. The same applies for new cables. There will be 40 and 80 Gbps cables. Some are already certified. Get informed.

Is there anything else you don't understand before you call it BS?
Posted on Reply
#12
Chomiq
Tek-CheckDisplays are being validated and certified as we speak. Will come out shortly. It's a bad argument to make to defend Nvidia's omission of DP 2.0.
They were suppose to be validated in 2020. Then in 2021. It's almost the end of 2022.

LG introduced HDMI 2.1 in 2019 and next year they gimped them to 40 Gbps, the same year that HDMI 2.1 GPUs were released.

Since there are 0 displays that feature DP 2.0 there's no motivation for GPU makers to deliver support for DP 2.0.
Posted on Reply
#13
Tek-Check
ChomiqSince there are 0 displays that feature DP 2.0 there's no motivation for GPU makers to deliver support for DP 2.0
Nvidia is the only GPU maker that doesn't feel "motivated".

Read again my previous post. I added a few bits.
ChomiqThey were suppose to be validated in 2020. Then in 2021. It's almost the end of 2022.
Watch interview with VESA rep on YouTube to find out more about why delays happen. You probably know that the world was engulfed into Covid pandemic. I hope we live on the same planet.
ChomiqLG introduced HDMI 2.1 in 2019 and next year they gimped them to 40 Gbps, the same year that HDMI 2.1 GPUs were released.
I did not make a point about "gimping" anything. It's irrelevant for the main topic.

There are four possible implementations of HDMI 2.1, from 24 Gbps to 48 Gbps ports. And there are two possible implementations of DP 2.0, either as 40 or 80 Gbps. Vendors can choose what they want to do.
Posted on Reply
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