NVIDIA will introduce new RTX 4090, 4080 and 4070 graphics cards in the coming summer months (likely July). The statements made by company officials in the past period indicated that we would wait for a while for other cards after the 4090 was released. However, according to the information revealed today, the company will put all its models on sale without waiting.
NVIDIA will take over the market with RTX 4090, 4080 and 4070!
Leaks that we have come across in the last few months and alleged insider information have been that NVIDIA executives will highlight the RTX 30 series instead of the 4080 and 4070 after the RTX 4090. Because the company took a similar step by continuing to sell the RTX 20 series last year due to the pandemic and disruptions in the supply chain.
It is said that the problems have been resolved to a large extent, and for this reason, it will consider the 4080 and 4070 graphics cards instead of the RTX 30 series (which will still be sold). However, even if the RTX 3060 graphics card will be introduced with the others during the event, it will not be among the ones that go on sale in the first place.
In addition, the features of the RTX 4090 are starting to become clear. The card is expected to be built on AD102 GPU with 16128 CUDA cores, 26GB 24Gbps GDDR6X memory. It is also said to have a TDP of 450W. The really exciting claim is that the Ti version can deliver 2 times higher performance than its predecessor, the RTX 3090.
In fact, last year, NVIDIA said that it was working on a new architecture called Ada Lovelace, and that this technology could offer 70 percent higher performance than its predecessor. But in return for this performance, the expected TDP value from the RTX 4090 was around 600W.
Of course, let’s mention that overclocked and dual or triple fan versions from 3rd party manufacturers can exceed the 600W limit. It is said that the TDP of the 4090Ti can reach up to 800W. Likewise, in the leaks that emerged in the past period, they were touted as “power-hungry monsters”.
Some PSU manufacturers have begun to slowly roll out new Gen 5 power supplies that contain the connectors needed to support the boards, even if the boards are not yet released. Of course, the models we’ve seen so far only have one Gen 5 connector.
Therefore, the cards that NVIDIA will release are expected to have a 16-pin input in one piece. However, users with a relatively old PSU will still be able to use power supplies with 2×8 pin – 1×16 pin adapters.
What do you think about this issue? Don’t forget to share your views with us in the comments!