• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

No 20 nm GPUs from AMD This Year

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,670 (7.43/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
It's not just NVIDIA, which will lack 20 nm GPUs in its portfolio this year. AMD senior vice-president Lisa Su, responding to a question by Wells Fargo, in its Q1 investors call, confirmed that her company will stay on 28 nm throughout 2014, and it's only later that it will move on to 20 nm, and FinFET after that. "I think what I said earlier sort of what we're doing in terms of technology strategy, we are 28 this year, we have 20-nanometer in design, and then FinFET thereafter. So that's the overall product portfolio," she said.

AMD and NVIDIA manufacture their GPUs on a common foundry, TSMC, which has faced delays in implementing its 20 nanometer silicon fab node transition, forcing both companies to come up with new GPUs on existing 28 nm nodes. A huge leap in performance could be a tough ask for those new GPUs. NVIDIA is expected to tape out its performance-segment GM204 and mid-range GM206 chips, both of which are 28 nm, later this month, and the first GeForce GTX products based on the two are expected to roll out by late-Q4 2014 and early-Q1 2015, respectively.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Not surprising. What they probably will do is they'll just continue rebranding Radeon series further, like, R7 300 and R9 300 Series for OEM (I'm almost sure we'll see new Pavilion's and XPS' w/ something like R9 375 this fall).
They might also spit out something like R9 285X (if they'll need to get rid of HD 7990 remains, LOL), but that's most unlikely.
 
so its gonna be another boring year from AMD? again? at least nvidia shows something promising from 750ti. And no more rebranding please...
 
I don't think they really mind about that. It's Nvidia who will be most unhappy with the 20nm delay. Maxwell looks much more advanced compared to Kepler than Hawaii compared to Tahiti. So the delay it gives in fact more time for AMD to improve it's designs, while at the same time it forces Nvidia to create more 28nm models than going straight to 20nm with Maxwell.
 
Isn't NVIDIA planning GTX 8xx series this year?
 
Thanks God. My wife would not approve another annual upgrade :)
 
According to this dutch site, from 20nm on they'll probably use globalfoundries instead of TSMC for their GPU's.

With Globalfoundries' announcement that they'll lease Samsung's 14nm finfet process there are interesting times ahead in semiconductor land for sure!
 
The fanboys are ruining this site o_O
 
Still using an HD 5850. Best purchase ever.
 
Still using an HD 5850. Best purchase ever.
Probably the best bang for buck card I've owned in the last few years. So good that when I sold my XFX Black Editions, I "upgraded" to the Sapphire Toxic 2GB HD 5850's in my AMD machine.
 
Isn't NVIDIA planning GTX 8xx series this year?

Yes, planned for June.

GM204, either a 870 or 880 on a 28nm node.
 
Probably the best bang for buck card I've owned in the last few years. So good that when I sold my XFX Black Editions, I "upgraded" to the Sapphire Toxic 2GB HD 5850's in my AMD machine.
So... You have upgraded from 2X 5850 to 2X 5850?..
 
Ya well no surprise, if TSMC aren't doing 20nm for NVidia they sure as hell aren't doing it for AMD either.
 
Nothing really new, TSMC has always been behind on forecast size reduction dates. Current GPU's are more than powerful enough for the typical gamers requirements. Until some next gen game actually brings something new to the table (which so far, none have), I don't forsee people requiring an upgrade for some time. At least we have a year for the GPU manufacturers to get on top of their drivers and squeeze every bit of performance from our cards, we may see some longevity yet.
 
Here comes the re-brands. Again.
 
Really makes the upgrade scenario a lot easier. Wanted to wait for DX12 anyway to get a better picture of how things would play out.

Now I can wait for 20nm AND DX12 next year. Maxwell will offer a bit better performance and a bit better power usage/heat production (if 750 Ti is anything to go by), but it's easy enough to wait.

Meanwhile, this puts nVidia into a forced tick-tock cadence. nVidia goes to a new architecture on existing fab, then next year moves to a newer fab with existing architecture. In a lot of ways, this plays to nVidia's interests regardless of whether it was forced on them or not.

And you just know that initial 20nm production is being centered on mobile device hardware anyway.
 
SO I am confused by this article and the last one. Both articles say they will be tapping out new chips this month, but then say they won't release until Q4 2014/Q1 2015. It really takes that long to bring a chip from tap out to market??? So are they saying the 20nm chips won't release until Q4/Q1 and new 28nm chips will? Or visa versa?

*Never mind*
Answered my own question....
"
Yes, planned for June.

GM204, either a 870 or 880 on a 28nm node."

Sigh.... so both companies are going to release another minor step in performance for 6 months then release the real deal. ....... Sigh again figures!
What they should do is hold off and wait fro the real new Gen.
 
Last edited:
SO I am confused by this article and the last one. Both articles say they will be tapping out new chips this month, but then say they won't release until Q4 2014/Q1 2015. It really takes that long to bring a chip from tap out to market??? So are they saying the 20nm chips won't release until Q4/Q1 and new 28nm chips will? Or visa versa?

*Never mind*
Answered my own question....
"
Yes, planned for June.

GM204, either a 870 or 880 on a 28nm node."

June announce, dec rls. Is 6 months which is normal time frame for things.
 
Sigh.... so both companies are going to release another minor step in performance for 6 months then release the real deal. ....... Sigh again figures!
What they should do is hold off and wait fro the real new Gen.

Your "Sigh" should be for TSCM not the companies waiting to get their sh#t figured out. And why we really need another competitive Fab instead of beholding to just the one. I'd don't know if GFlo will ever get in the mix, but there needs to be some leverage to press TSCM to be more... Face it, they botched 28Nm when it left the gate and neither company wants to be some guinea pig again.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 64K
Your "Sigh" should be for TSCM not the companies waiting to get their sh#t figured out. And why we really need another competitive Fab instead of beholding to just the one. I'd don't know if GFlo will ever get in the mix, but there needs to be some leverage to press TSCM to be more... Face it, they botched 28Nm when it left the gate and neither company wants to be some guinea pig again.

GlobalFoundies is on the rise and a good competitor to TMSC, its just unfortunate that AMD and NVidia have signed 20nm chip contracts with TMSC - notorious for hyping up release dates and missing
them.

At lease there is hope in the future - GlobalFoundries recently signed licensing terms with Samsung for the 14nm FinFET and abandoned their in house 14nm.
 
Your "Sigh" should be for TSCM not the companies waiting to get their sh#t figured out. And why we really need another competitive Fab instead of beholding to just the one. I'd don't know if GFlo will ever get in the mix, but there needs to be some leverage to press TSCM to be more... Face it, they botched 28Nm when it left the gate and neither company wants to be some guinea pig again.

Or pay for wafers with a bunch of partially defective GPUs on it. IIRC TSMC was charging by the wafer so it was a gamble what the yield would be on the GK110 per wafer at least until TSMC got their act together.
 
Well AMD, since you are free now, you better improve your drivers. Also, improve your your boost algorithms. (Powertune on 290/290X is good but the range of voltages in 3D mode is really really less.)
 
Back
Top