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

NVIDIA Announces RTX A6000 48 GB Professional Graphics Card Accelerators

Raevenlord

News Editor
Joined
Aug 12, 2016
Messages
3,755 (1.18/day)
Location
Portugal
System Name The Ryzening
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Motherboard MSI X570 MAG TOMAHAWK
Cooling Lian Li Galahad 360mm AIO
Memory 32 GB G.Skill Trident Z F4-3733 (4x 8 GB)
Video Card(s) Gigabyte RTX 3070 Ti
Storage Boot: Transcend MTE220S 2TB, Kintson A2000 1TB, Seagate Firewolf Pro 14 TB
Display(s) Acer Nitro VG270UP (1440p 144 Hz IPS)
Case Lian Li O11DX Dynamic White
Audio Device(s) iFi Audio Zen DAC
Power Supply Seasonic Focus+ 750 W
Mouse Cooler Master Masterkeys Lite L
Keyboard Cooler Master Masterkeys Lite L
Software Windows 10 x64
NVIDIA today announced their RTX A6000 series of graphics cards, meant to perform as graphics accelerators for professional workloads. And the announcement marks a big departure for the company's marketing, as the Quadro moniker has apparently been dropped. The RTX A6000 includes all raytracing resources also present on consumer RTX graphics cards, and marks a product segmentation from the company's datacenter-geared A40. The RTXA6000 features a full-blown GA102 chip - meaning 10752 CUDA cores powering single-precision compute performance of up to 38.7 TFLOPs (3.1 TLFOPs higher than that of the GeForce RTX 3090). Besides offering NVIDIA's professional driver support and features, the RTX A6000 features 48 GB of GDDR6 (note the absence of the X) memory - ensuring everything and the kitchen sink can be stored in the cards' VRAM. GDDR6X doesn't currently offer the per-chip density of GDDR6 solution, hence why NVIDIA opted for the lower-performing, yet denser memory variant.

The RTX A6000 features a classic blower-type cooler, and presents a new low-profile NVLink bridge that enables two of them to work in tandem within the same system. NVIDIA vGPU virtualization technologies are supported as well; display outputs are taken care of by 4x DisplayPort connectors, marking the absence of HDMI solutions. The card is currently listed for preorder at a cool and collected $5,500, but with insufficient silicon to offer even to its highest-margin datacenter customers, it remains to be seen exactly how available these will be in the market.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
No, Anandtech posted it properly as an announcement in October but some sites incorrectly reposted it as a launch. NVidia's own announcement actually stated availability in mid-December:
NVIDIA Ampere GPUs for Professional Designers Bring Unparalleled Performance to Desktop, Data Center and Cloud | NVIDIA Blog

@Raevenlord Perhaps, this article needs to be titled Launch instead of Announcement?

Ah yep, it was just the announcement. Got it.


Some were indeed saying it was a launch in October. Very confusing.
 
To think I actually waited for the "A4000" instead of just scooping up an RTX 4000. And now the RTX 4000 is about +$200 vs when I was going to do a build 4-5 months ago.
 
@Nater Curious what you're using these accelerators for.
 
@Raevenlord Perhaps, this article needs to be titled Launch instead of Announcement?
Small print says availability 2 - 4 weeks, so early January.
It's not a Launch yet.

I don't see how they can operate effectively being that close together and not get hot or overheat.
Blower fans are not designed for that style of cooling and require an air gap to individually draw air in.
 
Last edited:
whats different in terms of features between the RTX A6000 and 3090?
 
48GB of GDDR6 vs 24GB of GDDR6X and full die vs partial.
 
It's actually cheaper than Quadros of the past considering how much memory it has, I wonder why is that.
 
is the RTX 3090 gimped in performance Double Precision or something? what are the pro features that are disabled?
 
It's actually cheaper than Quadros of the past considering how much memory it has, I wonder why is that.
Ignoring /s -- VideoCardz speculated that NVidia hoarded GDDR6, and with the shortage of GPUs needing GDDR6, it was a good opportunity to offload them. At full bus-width, the 16gbps speed should still pack plenty of bandwidth for any scientific use.
 
It's actually cheaper than Quadros of the past considering how much memory it has, I wonder why is that.
Reduced cost is the likely reason. NVidia can make them for less while still make a solid profit and they're passing on the saving. They kinda have to as AMD is on their heels with FirePro(?) offerings.
 
is the RTX 3090 gimped in performance Double Precision or something? what are the pro features that are disabled?
Some quick googling suggests that the 3090 is 1/64 fp64 while the A6000 is 1/32.
 

If someone said they just bought one of these I would have guessed it was an AMD card, but adding RTX in front of it raises an eyebrow.

So when is the A6080 launch? :p :rolleyes:
 
Probably better value than the 3090 ;)
 
That fan must be drawing air from the 4th dimension in Pic No.2
 
That fan must be drawing air from the 4th dimension in Pic No.2
It has cutout on the back
127716-quadro-rtx-a6000-1.jpg
 
Back
Top