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AMD could follow up on its RX 6800 series and RX 6900 XT launches with the RX 6700 series, which logically succeeds the RX 5700 series, and competes with NVIDIA's RTX 3060/Ti. Patrick Schur on Twitter, who has a high hit-rate with specs of upcoming AMD products, put out possible specs of the RX 6700 series. Both are based on the new "Navi 22" silicon, with an interesting set of specifications.
Apparently 12 GB could be AMD's new memory amount for the mid-range. It's unknown whether the 12 GB is running over a 192-bit wide memory interface (6x 16 Gbit chips), or whether AMD is using mixed-density chips over a 256-bit wide memory bus (think 4x 16 Gbit and 4x 8 Gbit), because even the fastest JEDEC-standard GDDR6 chips, running at 16 Gbps, would only yield 384 GB/s memory bandwidth, which is less than the 448 GB/s the RX 5700 series enjoy. Perhaps an Infinity Cache is deployed to make up the difference?
As for power, the RX 6700 XT (described as Navi 22 XT), is expected to have typical graphics power of 186-221 W, while the RX 6700 (Navi 22 XTL), could have 146-156 W TGP), which could mean that at least the RX 6700 could make do with a single 8-pin PCIe power input. VideoCardz predicts that the RX 6700 XT could feature 40 RDNA2 compute units—so 2,560 stream processors; and the RX 6700 featuring 36 (2,304), so the same exact number of shaders as the previous generation. The secret sauce here could be the significantly higher engine clocks, and possibly an Infinity Cache.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Apparently 12 GB could be AMD's new memory amount for the mid-range. It's unknown whether the 12 GB is running over a 192-bit wide memory interface (6x 16 Gbit chips), or whether AMD is using mixed-density chips over a 256-bit wide memory bus (think 4x 16 Gbit and 4x 8 Gbit), because even the fastest JEDEC-standard GDDR6 chips, running at 16 Gbps, would only yield 384 GB/s memory bandwidth, which is less than the 448 GB/s the RX 5700 series enjoy. Perhaps an Infinity Cache is deployed to make up the difference?
As for power, the RX 6700 XT (described as Navi 22 XT), is expected to have typical graphics power of 186-221 W, while the RX 6700 (Navi 22 XTL), could have 146-156 W TGP), which could mean that at least the RX 6700 could make do with a single 8-pin PCIe power input. VideoCardz predicts that the RX 6700 XT could feature 40 RDNA2 compute units—so 2,560 stream processors; and the RX 6700 featuring 36 (2,304), so the same exact number of shaders as the previous generation. The secret sauce here could be the significantly higher engine clocks, and possibly an Infinity Cache.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site