Home / Tech News / Featured Announcement / Nvidia officially unveils the RTX A6000 and RTX A40

Nvidia officially unveils the RTX A6000 and RTX A40

Nvidia has officially unveiled the RTX A series of graphics cards during GTC Digital 2020. Consisting of the RTX A6000 workstation graphics card and the RTX A40 data centre graphics card, the new RTX A series was designed to help professionals deal with emerging enterprise workloads, “from the desktop to the data centre”. As it seems, the “Quadro” and “Tesla” naming has been dropped on the upcoming graphics cards.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, content is created and consumed in different ways. Teams are now more dispersed, but they keep “working remotely on high-resolution content”, using various workloads that require an enormous amount of resources. The RTX A series was created to help professionals tackle their tasks, offering all the benefits that come included with Nvidia Ampere architecture. Just like other Ampere graphics cards, the new RTX A series will feature 2nd generation RT cores, 3rd generation tensor cores, the latest CUDA cores, GDDR6 memory, and PCIe 4.0 interfaces.

Both cards will use the GA102 GPU with 84 streaming processors, totalling in 10752 CUDA cores. These graphics cards will also feature NVLink and 48GB of VRAM, but at different clock speeds: the RTX A6000 comes at 16Gbps (maximum bandwidth of 768GB/s), while the RTX A40 comes at 14.5Gbps (maximum bandwidth of 696GB/s). The RTX A40 features 3x DisplayPort 1.4, but they are disabled by default, which is expected given that it's a data centre graphics card. On the other hand, the RTX A6000 comes with 4x DisplayPort 1.4 ready to be used. Both cards feature a TDP of 300W and a new 8-pin power connector.

Pricing details were not shared yet, but these cards are expected to release in mid-December. You can learn more about the Nvidia RTX A6000 HERE, and the RTX A40 HERE.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru says: Do any of you regularly use professional GPUs like the Nvidia Quadro? Will your workstation be getting an Ampere upgrade? 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Dutch Retailer talks to Kitguru and retracts ‘RTX 5090 recall’ claim

Earlier today, a KitGuru reader reached out to us to let us know about a rather bold claim from a retailer based in the Netherlands. Our reader Ben, who spent €3399 on an MSI RTX 5090 Suprim more than a month ago, was informed by the store that they would not receive their graphics card anytime soon due to a 'product recall'. Specifically, the claim was made that Nvidia had recalled a number of RTX 5090 graphics cards due to a potential fire hazard.