3/2/2024 0 Comments Rtx 3090 newCombined with the comparatively low cost – at least compared to the Titan RTX – the RTX 3090 is a straight up bargain.Īs we mentioned in our RTX 3080 review, both the Tensor cores and RT cores that Nvidia has made such a huge deal of these past couple graphics card generations see big improvements, too. And, when your work involves these applications, anything that can shave time off of project times saves you money in the long term. Having such a huge allocation of VRAM that is this fast means that anyone that does heavy 3D rendering work in applications like Davinci Resolve and Blender will get a huge benefit. The RTX 3090 is also rocking 24GB of GDDR6X video memory on a 384-bit bus, which makes for 936 GB/s of memory bandwidth – that's nearly a terabyte of data every second. This means that CUDA core counts per SM is effectively doubled, which is why the RTX 3090 is such a rendering behemoth. This time around, we're getting 82 Streaming Multiprocessors (SM), making for a total of 10,496 CUDA cores, along with 328 Tensor cores and 82 RT Cores.Īt first glance, the small bump up from the 72 SMs on the Nvidia Turing-based Titan RTX seems like a minor improvement, but one of the most groundbreaking differences with the Ampere architecture is the ability for both datapaths on each SM being able to handle FP32 workloads. Just like its little sibling, the RTX 3080, the RTX 3090 is built on the Nvidia Ampere architecture, using the full-fat GA102 GPU. Outputs: 1 x HDMI 2.1, 3 x DisplayPort 1.4 Stream multiprocessors: 82 (128 CUDA per SM) Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090: Features and chipset The GeForce name suggests that this graphics card is aimed at gamers, but the specs and pricing suggest that it's more geared towards prosumers that need raw rendering power, but aren't quite ready to jump into the Nvidia Quadro and Tesla worlds. Given the present market and the previous generation of professional-grade graphics cards, the RTX 3090 exists in kind of a middle ground. And while that card had comparable gaming performance to the RTX 3090 in some games, it fell behind in others and got absolutely crushed in creative workloads. The Gigabyte card in our AMD Radeon RX 6950 XT review, meanwhile, cost $1,299 (about £1,040 / AU$1,820). However, the card in our Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 Ti review launched at $1,199 (£1,099, AU$1,899), which isn't that much cheaper than the RTX 3090. Compared to the Nvidia Titan RTX, it's a massive price cut, where that card cost an outrageous $2,499 (£2,399, AU$3,999) for similar, albeit last-generation, specs. It's hard to pin down whether this is a price increase or a price cut over the previous generation. However, this will be the first time Nvidia has opened up a Titan-level card up to third party graphics card manufacturers like MSI, Asus and Zotac, which means you can expect some versions of the RTX 3090 to be significantly more expensive. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090 is available right now, starting at $1,499 (£1,399, around AU$2,030) for Nvidia's own Founders Edition. The redesign of the PCB on the RTX 3090 requires a whole new 12-pin power connector.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |