Saturday, March 8th 2025

NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 "Blackwell" Features 24,064 Cores Paired with 96 GB GDDR7 ECC Memory

NVIDIA has prepared a "Blackwell" Titan equivalent—RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPU for professional visualization and local AI solutions. Based on the GB202 silicon, the RTX PRO 6000 is the closest solution to the full power of NVIDIA's prosumer-oriented Blackwell SKUs. With 24,064 CUDA cores on board, this configuration is just 512 CUDA cores shy from the complete GB202 24,576-core configuration. This is likely due to the yield defects, meaning that this is perhaps the highest CUDA core count model we will see based on GB202. Additionally, at 24,064 core RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell is carrying 2,340 more cores than the top-end consumer GeForce RTX 5090 with 21,760 CUDA cores. Based on the 600 W TGP, the new RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell should have lower clocks, given its bigger core count to maintain the TGP for its massive memory configuration. Remember, GDDR7 memory modules consume power, too.

With 96 GB of GDDR7 memory and ECC memory correction on board, it will primarily target professionals in 3D rendering, simulations, and local AI development. To cool the beastly configuration, NVIDIA opted for a double-flow-through cooler used on the RTX 5090, with an open-air design. Operating on a PCIe 5.0 x16 interface with four DisplayPort 2.1 connectors, the design remains double-slot in thickness. VideoCardz obtained pictures of it, which you can see below. Interestingly, the color accents of the new cooler are darker. We can expect to see more from NVIDIA and its new RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPU from the upcoming GTC 2025 on March 17.
Source: VideoCardz
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59 Comments on NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 "Blackwell" Features 24,064 Cores Paired with 96 GB GDDR7 ECC Memory

#51
MCJAxolotl7
Why don't they add "AI" to the name?








Only half joking.
Posted on Reply
#52
GodisanAtheist
Ah, in case anyone was wondering where all the Blackwell supply and GDDR7 ram was going...
Posted on Reply
#53
trsttte
If only they could use GB202 on something with a reasonable power budget like 300 or at most 400W :ohwell:
Posted on Reply
#55
SkullFox
Onasi‘Kay. So the 4090 was (officially) 1600 bucks. The RTX 6000 Ada was the same idea in relation to that as this is to the 5090 and was 6800 bucks. So 4.25 times more. By that logic this will, at best, start at 8500. Cool. And the fun part - they will all sell out.
This is we do not have 5090s available.... same finite crushed sand, but this one carries 4 times more profits, for the same cost....
GodisanAtheistAh, in case anyone was wondering where all the Blackwell supply and GDDR7 ram was going...
doubt the supply issue is the ram. is that the lie they are peddling?
BigMack70Honestly, the market needs a prosumer GPU like this. Gamers and professionals competing for the top gaming card only means gamers' wallets are unnecessarily destroyed.
Nah man.... Its the other way round the market should not allow this to happen. making gamers compete with professionals for the exact same chips is what's making the whole gaming gpu shortage.... what should be happening is professionals with completely different arquitecture than this gamers... why would nvidia sell a GPU for $2k when it can sell it for $8k?? same costs but 4 times the revenue....
DemonicRyzen666This needs to go along with that one Thermaltake case that gamers nexus said it got its airflow from the 4th dimension.
Link...

got to love the post merging.... :D
Posted on Reply
#56
MxPhenom 216
ASIC Engineer
SkullFoxThis is we do not have 5090s available.... same finite crushed sand, but this one carries 4 times more profits, for the same cost....


doubt the supply issue is the ram. is that the lie they are peddling?


Nah man.... Its the other way round the market should not allow this to happen. making gamers compete with professionals for the exact same chips is what's making the whole gaming gpu shortage.... what should be happening is professionals with completely different arquitecture than this gamers... why would nvidia sell a GPU for $2k when it can sell it for $8k?? same costs but 4 times the revenue....


Link...

got to love the post merging.... :D
Except the RAM is literally contributing to it. Samsung is the only GDDR7 supplier for Nvidia right now. They started mass production at the last half of last year.
Posted on Reply
#57
tpa-pr
Nvidia layman here: this is the same generation as the 5000 series, so why is it designated 6000? Do the PRO cards have their own generation line or is it similar to AMD and their mobile GPU versioning?
Posted on Reply
#58
MxPhenom 216
ASIC Engineer
tpa-prNvidia layman here: this is the same generation as the 5000 series, so why is it designated 6000? Do the PRO cards have their own generation line or is it similar to AMD and their mobile GPU versioning?
Their Pro cards have their own generational naming. Its usually ahead of Geforce cards or just not even related.
Posted on Reply
#59
igormp
tpa-prNvidia layman here: this is the same generation as the 5000 series, so why is it designated 6000? Do the PRO cards have their own generation line or is it similar to AMD and their mobile GPU versioning?
Totally different. Previous Gen (equivalent to the GeForce 4000 series) had a RTX 6000 Ada, the one before that (Ampere, GeForce 3000 series) had a RTX A6000.
Their enterprise lineup has a totally non-sense naming scheme. At least now it has the "Pro" moniker.
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