Nvidia RTX 4000 series GPU architecture specifications leaked

So many leaks, so much power

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Nvidia’s recent cyberattack has left them with lots of leaks coming from the hacking group and the information they gathered. Videocardz reports that one piece of information is the RTX 4000 series GPU architecture and specifications. These are only rumored and might not be the final ones but highly likely with multiple sources sending the same information it is likely they are the final architecture details.

This leaked information is just another piece of information coming from the infiltrated internal information from Nvidia. Following the released source code for DLSS, these are supposedly only a handful of files from terabytes of data that the hackers managed to retrieve from Nvidia’s internal servers.

What are the RTX 4000 series architecture specifications?

The information released is the CUDA count of the different dies coming in the RTX 4000 series architecture. They contain five desktop graphic processors, the same count as the Ampere (RTX 30) lineup. Here’s the reported CUDA count of those dies.

ADA GPUSMsCUDAsMemory Bus WidthL2 Cache
AD10214418432384-bit96 MB
AD1038410752256-bit64 MB
AD104607680256-bit64 MB
AD106364608192-bit48 MB
AD107243072128-bit32 MB
RTX 4000 Series GPU architecture
ADA GPUSMsCUDAsMemory Bus WidthL2 Cache
GA1028410752384-bit6 MB
GA1036010752256-bit4 MB
GA104486144256-bit4 MB
GA106303840192-bit3 MB
GA107202560128-bit2 MB
RTX 30 series GPU architecture

As of writing, even more information has been revealed by Videocardz and leakers. This is concerning the L2 cache of the GPU and the significant increase in the amount of cache available on the GPU. Even the lowest Lovelace GPU has 32MB, nearly 30 MB more than a GA102 die, which can be found in the RTX 3080s and 3090s. The overall leap in cache increases the throughput of the cache from 512 KB per 32-bit to a staggering 16 MB of cache per 54-bit memory bus.

Overall the significant increase in the RTX 4000 series architecture should produce significant performance increases over the current generation of cards. Which is also expected to come with the AMD Radeon lineup, giving us the most powerful consumer cards yet. An exciting prospect to look forward to later on in the year.

Nvidia AD102 GPU architecture
A snippet of a third of what the Nvidia AD102 architecture looks like

Product Benchmarker and Writer AT WEPC

Sebastian Kozlowski

After taking apart and tinkering with the home PC and other electronics, Seb went to study Mechanical Engineering at the University of Manchester to try and explore everything in parts. After he graduated he realised how different the adult world was and decided to pursue work in the tech industry after spending too much time playing games (mostly CS:GO), keeping up with everything tech, and being everyone's go-to for PCs.

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