Wednesday, September 21st 2022

NVIDIA Introduces L40 Omniverse Graphics Card

During its GTC 2022 session, NVIDIA introduced its new generation of gaming graphics cards based on the novel Ada Lovelace architecture. Dubbed NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 series, it brings various updates like more CUDA cores, a new DLSS 3 version, 4th generation Tensor cores, 3rd generation Ray Tracing cores, and much more, which you can read about here. However, today, we also got a new Ada Lovelace card intended for the data center. Called the L40, NVIDIA updated its previous Ampere-based A40 design. While the NVIDIA website provides sparse, the new L40 GPU uses 48 GB GDDR6 memory with ECC error correction. Using NVLink, you can get 96GBs of VRAM. Paired with an unknown SKU, we assume that it uses AD102 with adjusted frequencies to lower the TDP and allow for passive cooling.

NVIDIA is calling this their Omniverse GPU, as it is a part of the push to separate its GPUs used for graphics and AI/HPC models. The "L" model in the current product stack is used to accelerate graphics, with display ports installed on the GPU, while the "H" models (H100) are there to accelerate HPC/AI installments where visual elements are a secondary task. This is a further separation of the entire GPU market, where the HPC/AI SKUs get their own architecture, and GPUs for graphics processing are built on a new architecture as well. You can see the specifications provided by NVIDIA below.
Sources: NVIDIA, via ServeTheHome
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6 Comments on NVIDIA Introduces L40 Omniverse Graphics Card

#1
P4-630
On the render you can see 1x 8 pin, in the specifications they say 1x 16 pin.
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#2
AleksandarK
News Editor
P4-630On the render you can see 1x 8 pin, in the specifications they say 1x 16 pin.
Updated with L40 pic, the A40 pic was the one which was there. Thanks!
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#3
P4-630
AleksandarKUpdated with L40 pic, the A40 pic was the one which was there. Thanks!
Something went wrong with the pic update it seems....
Posted on Reply
#4
ymdhis
This one looks a lot nicer than the 3080/4080 cooler design, but I don't know how they expect to have a max TDP of 300W with only passive cooling.
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#5
P4-630
ymdhisThis one looks a lot nicer than the 3080/4080 cooler design, but I don't know how they expect to have a max TDP of 300W with only passive cooling.
It's probably meant to stick in a rack with industrial high airflow fans.
Posted on Reply
#6
shovenose
ymdhisThis one looks a lot nicer than the 3080/4080 cooler design, but I don't know how they expect to have a max TDP of 300W with only passive cooling.
That's been a thing for years. I have a Grid K2 and a Tesla M40 both of which were passive originally. They rely on high CFM airflow from a server chassis for cooling.
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Dec 17th, 2024 23:29 EST change timezone

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