Monday, August 26th 2024
NVIDIA's RTX 5060 "Blackwell" Laptop GPU Comes with 8 GB of GDDR7 Memory Running at 28 Gbps, 25 W Lower TGP
In a recent event hosted by Chinese laptop manufacturer Hasee, company's chairman Wu Haijun unveiled exciting details about NVIDIA's upcoming GeForce RTX 5060 "Blackwell" laptop GPU. Attending the event was industry insider Golden Pig Upgrade, who managed to catch some details of the card set to launch next year. The RTX 5060 is expected to be the first in the market to feature GDDR7 memory, a move that aligns with earlier leaks suggesting NVIDIA's entire Blackwell lineup would adopt this new standard. This upgrade is anticipated to deliver substantial boosts in bandwidth and possibly increased VRAM capacities in other SKUs. Perhaps most intriguing is the reported performance of the RTX 5060. Wu said this laptop SKU could offer performance comparable to the current RTX 4070 laptop GPU. It's said to exceed the RTX 4070 in ray tracing scenarios and match or come close to its rasterization performance.
This leap in capabilities is made even more impressive by the chip's reduced power consumption, with a maximum TGP of 115 W compared to the RTX 4060's 140 W. The reported power efficiency gains are not exclusive to RTX 5060. Wu suggests that the entire Blackwell lineup will see significant reductions in power draw, potentially lowering overall system power consumption by 40 to 50 watts in many Blackwell models. While specific technical details remain limited, it's believed the RTX 5060 will utilize the GB206 GPU die paired with 8 GB of GDDR7 memory, likely running at 28 Gbps in its initial iteration.
Source:
via Wccftech
This leap in capabilities is made even more impressive by the chip's reduced power consumption, with a maximum TGP of 115 W compared to the RTX 4060's 140 W. The reported power efficiency gains are not exclusive to RTX 5060. Wu suggests that the entire Blackwell lineup will see significant reductions in power draw, potentially lowering overall system power consumption by 40 to 50 watts in many Blackwell models. While specific technical details remain limited, it's believed the RTX 5060 will utilize the GB206 GPU die paired with 8 GB of GDDR7 memory, likely running at 28 Gbps in its initial iteration.
108 Comments on NVIDIA's RTX 5060 "Blackwell" Laptop GPU Comes with 8 GB of GDDR7 Memory Running at 28 Gbps, 25 W Lower TGP
5050 - 6gb
5060- 8gb
5070 - 12gb
5080- 16gb
5080ti/5090 - 20gb
720p = 6-8gb
1080p = 8-12gb
1440p =12=16gb
4k= 16=24gb
The **60 tier is midrange, which obviously can't afford to be equipped with low-end | entry level VRAM amount.
For iGPUs and **50 / lower tiers, 8 GB would be fine, but for the 5060 the amount must be at least 12 GB, but preferably 16 GB.
but If Nvidia priced it at 250us, i guess i could forgive the so-small amount of RAM.
sorry, did not read that it was a laptop chip... so this will be in console priced Laptops? ROFL. (550 american, will the laptop even be 1100?...)
BTW, Nvidia should enforce the idea that any Laptop that has a blackwell gpu also has a Gsync monitor panel.
(bought a laptop with a 970 (long time ago)… but if that laptop had an adaptive sync panel (gsync) it would be useful today for old games. problem is that games play at 44fps, and stuttering everywhere. had the 1800can laptop had a gsync panel, still be useful now…
4050-4060, its 15% faster, 4060-4070, another 15% increase, 4070-4080 50% increase. 4080-4090, maybe 10% increase.
4050-4070 where all volt limited to 100w. The 4000 '60 model is more like a 4050ti, its still low end for this generation.
In my desktop I have 7800xt nitro + 16gb card
And my Clevo PE60 has i9 13900h and 4070 140w 8gb ddr6. Runs pretty much all games at high / ultra in 2k.
And for sure ultra in 1920x1080.
Only wierd part is i get more fps in hybrid mode than on GPU only.
Still dont fully understand why maybe the Cpu helps with it's arc graphics.
8GB at $250
12GB at $350
16GB above $450
Pricing is much harder to isolate on laptops, but I guess a $1000 gaming laptop will come with an 8GB card and a $2000 laptop should have at least 12GB, if not 16GB. Hybrid mode doesn't mean it's using the Intel graphics to do any gaming, but it also affects the use of the MUX switch and allows dynamic power allocation between CPU+GPU.
If you fire up GPU-Z's sensors tab and select your integrated graphics, you'll see that they're idle when you're gaming, even in hybrid mode.