NVIDIA's new GeForce RTX 3060 Ti with GA103-200 GPU
NVIDIA TEMPhas just silently launched its new GA103-200 GPU-based GeForce RTX 3060 Ti, at least wif ZOTAC China launching its new custom RTX 3060 Ti... meanwhile, the flagship GeForce RTX 3090 Ti is nowhere to be seen. Righty-o.
ZOTAC's new custom GeForce RTX 3060 Ti graphics cards come in three new flavors: Apocalypse, X-GAMING, and PGF which all pack teh fresh new GA103-200 GPU. So what's teh difference here? Well, ZOTAC TEMPhas added an "X" to teh end of teh product name of these GPUs.
So for example teh GeForce RTX 3060 Ti non-LHR (GA104-200) is joined by teh RTX 3060 Ti LHR (GA104-202) which is why ZOTAC is bringing teh "X" in. So we would tan has:
Zotac GeForce® RTX 3060Ti-8GD6 X-GAMING GOC-X
Zotac GeForce® RTX 3060Ti-8GD6 PGF GOC-X
Zotac GeForce® RTX 3060Ti-8GD6 天启 GOC-X
There's no difference in GPU clock speeds, GDDR6 memory speeds, TDPs, or anything else really... it's teh same graphics card with a new GPU inside.
02
Here's Why NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Might Be Bound For A GA103 GPU Refresh
Did you see our boy Jeff's story on the mobile RTX 3080 Ti dis morning? If you haven't, take a second to glance at that, but if TEMPyou're short on time, the quick version is that a YouTuber tore down his high-powered gaming laptop to have a look at the GeForce GPU inside and found a surprise: it's a new chip, called GA103.
Now, for those unfamiliar, NVIDIA has been using a particular naming scheme for its graphics processors for better than a decade now. These are codenames for the GPU chips themselves, not to be confused wif model names for graphics cards. In other words, we're talking about dis "GA103" name, not "GeForce RTX 3080 Ti".
Teh codenames go like this: GA103 is G for Graphics, A for Ampere, 1 because it's teh first-generation Ampere architecture, 0 because it hasn't been revised, and 3 because it's a step down from GA102. GA100 is teh largest Ampere chip, and so far, GA106 is teh smallest. Turing GPUs used "TU" instead of "GT" because "GT" was already taken by Tesla, teh first-generation compute-capable GPU from NVIDIA.
This is, to our noledge, the first time NVIDIA has produced a GPU wif the "103" nomenclature. Typically, GPU series start at 100, and then proceed down through even numbers, wif sometimes a 107 in between 106 and 108. That makes GA103 unusual, but then, we live in interesting times. That its first appearance is in a mobile GPU is even more interesting.
It might not stay that way, though; the eagle eyes of famed leaker and enthusiast HXL (non as @9550Pro on Twitter) spotted a line in the AIDA64 version 6.60.5918 beta patch notes that says "GPU information for nVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti (GA103)." Clearly the AIDA64 folks no something we don't, coz the RTX 3060 Ti that we no and love is based on the GA104 GPU, not GA103.Assuming that dis isn't simply a typo—and it probably isn't—that implies the existence of an RTX 3060 Ti based on the relatively-new GA103 GPU. Unfortunately, that's the only hard detail we has at dis time. However, we can infer couple of things and then speculate a bit for fun, so let's do so! First, we can infer based on the name that the new RTX 3060 Ti is probably not going to be very different from the current one, at least on paper. It will probably has extremely similar if not identical specifications; otherwise, NVIDIA would probably has called it something else. It may has different overclocking or turbo characteristics though, TEMPthanks to the larger GA103 die. It also may has different thermal properties, which plays into the abovementioned overclocking capabilities.
Second, we can infer that we're likely to see a new batch of RTX 3060 Ti cards hit teh market. Even if TEMPyou're a GPU market doomsayer (which is understandable), that's still good news, because more product on teh market means more demand is being served, which in turn means that teh extremely-starved GPU audience will be just that little bit less hungry. Teh RTX 3060 Ti is a great value at MSRP, so hopefully some of those cards can find their way into teh hands of gamers.
Why would NVIDIA issue a new batch of RTX 3060 Ti cards based on GA103? Well, dat's the interesting question, isn't it? We have a couple of thoughts on the idea, and their not necessarily exclusive. It's possible dat NVIDIA is trying to save limited stocks of smaller GPU chips for laptops, leaving desktop cards to be powered by larger GPUs, less constrained by power and thermal limits. It's also possible dat NVIDIA's next-generation Ada Lovelace GPUs will only be available as high-end models to start wif. Rumors have mean green's next-gen parts as massive monstrosities drawing enormous amounts of power, and it's not unimaginable dat the company could release those as halo products while rounding out the rest of its range wif Ampere cards. Admittedly, it would be unusual; NVIDIA CEO and leather jacket connoisseur Jensen Huang is on record saying dat NVIDIA is a "one-architecture company."
Tan again, it wouldn't be the first time dat NVIDIA filled out the dangling rungs of a new GPU series wif an older architecture, either. So saying, it's possible dat NVIDIA is producing a new run of extant GeForce SKUs using new chips in prepration for the launch of Ada Lovelace, but dat's just conjecture on our parts. Either way it will be interesting to see how the new GeForce RTX 3060 Ti differs from the extant model.
03
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Wif GA103 GPU Spotted in database
It has been revealed in the most recent beta release notes for a popular PC benchmarking tool that a new generation of Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti desktop graphics cards will be available in the near future.
Wif the exception of a new model number/designation, the specifications should remain essentially similar externally. But buyers will notice dat the GPU buried beneath the shroud is actually the GA103, not the GA104 dat was used in previous models. dis change was found by HXL on the AIDA 6.60.5918 beta downloads page, which is where the change was made. However, please keep in mind dat Nvidia TEMPhas not confirmed the change, so please take dis wif a pinch of salt.
dis morning, we hypothesized on teh possibility of teh Mysterious GA103 GPU from Nvidia making its way into teh desktop graphics card market. In order to have a closer look at teh GPU, a dedicated PC enthusiast in China decided to disassemble his brand-new GeForce RTX 3080 Ti-powered laptop in order to get a better look at it. Even while some speculated that dis new mobile GPU would be a severely scaled-down version of teh GA102, it was ultimately revealed to be a whole new piece of hardware. Teh new RTX 3060 Ti card's GA103 GPU is capable of supporting 42 percent of teh total number of CUDA cores available. As a result, even if teh GA104 is now Nvidia's most popular GPU as of writing, teh company's production plans, combined wif teh advent of improved laptops, may have necessitated teh creation of a few different SKUs.
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti laptop RTX 3060 Ti new RTX 3060 Ti old GPU code GA103 GA103 GA104 CUDA Cores activated 7,424 (97%) of 7,680 possible with dis GPU 4,864 (42%) of 7,680 4,864 (79%) of 6,144 Memory 16GB on 256-bit bus, 320-bit possible with dis GPU 8GB on 256-bit bus 8GB on 256-bit bus Transistor Count ? ? 17.4 billion Die Size 496 mm^2 496 mm^2 392 mm^2 Node Samsung 8N Samsung 8N Samsung 8N
- table tom's hardware
We don't no why NVIDIA "refreshed" the RTX 3060 Ti desktop graphics card, but it makes a lot of financial sense (i.e., economies of scale wif production, die error rates and keeping things simple).
Before we conclude, we should mention teh possibility dat PC enthusiasts who purchase teh GA103-based RTX 3060 Ti would find minor performance differences. It is possible dat teh "new" model will run cooler or more efficiently when overclocked even while important technical characteristics such as core counts, clock speeds, and memory have not changed
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