More information on clock speeds for the AMD Raden RX6800XT custom “big new” graphics cards is provided here. Patrick the Brave. In his recent tweet, Patrick talks about the AMS Raden graphics card, the ROG Strix Raden RX6800XT from ASUS, which reportedly comes with clocks in excess of 2.5 GHz.
ASUS ROG STRIX Radeon RX 6800 XT with AMS’s big new “New 21XT” GPU features watches from 2.5 GHz onwards at 290W TGP
This information is based on samples from the Engineering Board so that the final clocks and TGP may vary but it is interesting to note that AIB. How AMD’s big new GPU has moved forward, even if it’s internal. ASUS’s ROG STRIX Radeon RX 6800 XT is the M-Dell released today and has three systems specified by Patrick tested within 3D Mark 11, all with clock speeds. The RX6800XT reportedly runs with a set of 290W TGP and a 1000 MHz memory clock that shows the death of 16.00 Gbps memory.
Here are some results with a TGP of 255 W. Don’t ask me what’s the difference between the 255W and 289W models.
Probably more OC headroom and more stable boost clocks? 🤔System 2
Average: 2298 MHz
Average: 2357 MHz
Maximum: 2509 MHzSystem 3
Average: 1993 MHz
Average: 2342 MHz
Maximum: 2557 MHz– Patrick Shur (@patrickschur_) October 25, 2020
ASUS ROG STRIX Radeon RX 6800 XT Custom Graphics Card Reported watches:
- Average – 2291/2289/2092 MHz
- Middle – 2373/2301/2320 MHz
- Maximum (Boost) – 2556/2394/2489 MHz
There are also entries on the 255W TGP by Patrick which are also listed below:
- Average – 2298/1993 MHz
- Middle – 2357/2342 MHz
- Maximum (Boost) – 2509/2557 MHz
The first thing mentioned by Liquor is that the drivers had some issues due to which the clock speed of the custom AMD Raden RX6800X graphics card is not as consistent as it should be. Major changes in the average clock speed should be resolved until the cards hit the market.
Also, the difference between the 255W and 290W TGPs will not be much visible but it is possible that a higher TGP card will provide more overclocking head-room and stable clock speed. 3Demark 11 is not something we should consider the heavy work-load for the graphics cards of 2020 so it is necessary to evaluate the latest more applications before the release of this clock speed for the final models.
Once again, the figures for the AMD Raden RX6800XT graphics are 290W and 255W TGP that AMD relies on GPU and VRM power alone. It is not the equivalent of NVIDIA’s TGP which is the figure for the entire board. Igor also said this and the 290W TGP variant should effectively finish with a total board power of around 350-355 watts.
We get more and more custom variations in November if these reports are accurate, but depending on the availability of a big new GPU for AMD’s Radian RX6800XT, top variants from each AIB can be expected in late November or around mid-December. Graphics card.
AMD Raden RX6800XT with new 21XT and Radion RX6800 with new 21XL GPU
The AMD Radeon RX6800 series will feature two RDNA 2 based graphics cards, the new 21 “Big New” based Radeon RX 6800 XT and Radeon RX 6800. AMD Radeon RX6800XT New 21XT GPU Will be packed with. Cut-down SQ with 72 cut units or 4608 SP. The card will also offer 16GBDDR6 memory of 256-bit bus interface, 512GB / s total bandwidth, and a 2250MHz boost in clock speeds and reference specs of the 2015MHz base. Yesterday, it was reported that the new 21XT could have up to 320 W for reference and 355 W for custom variants.
The new 21 “Big New” GPU with 64 compute units of 4096 stream processors will also be cut further in the AMD Radeon RX6800 graphics card. The card will have the same VRAM profile, 166GB GDDR6 memory, 256-bit bus interface, but it is reported that the card will end up with a slightly lower memory clock of 14GBps which will give a net bandwidth of 448GB / s. . The GPU will feature 2105 MHz boost clocks on the 1815 MHz game clock speed and reference specs. MMM was also told that the new 21XL GPU with AMD. The Raden RX 6800 can bring a TBP of 290W on stock watches.
AMD will officially unveil its RX6000 series graphics card family on October 28th. The second part of 2020 will definitely be an interesting time for all hardware enthusiasts and mainstream PC gamers who are waiting to upgrade their PCs with the best hardware.