NVIDIA has just announced 3 new models in its RTX workstation card family, with the new RTX 5000 with 24GB of VRAM, sitting under the flagship RTX 6000 with 48GB of VRAM. NVIDIA is using its AD102 "Ada Lovelace" GPU with 12,800 CUDA cores at up to 2.5GHz, with 32GB of GDDR6 ECC memory at 18Gbps on a 256-bit memory bus with up to 578GB/sec of memory bandwidth and a 250W TDP.
The RTX A4500 features the AD104 GPU with 7680 CUDA cores at up to 2.6GHz, and 24GB of GDDR6 ECC memory at 18Gbps on a 192-bit memory bus with up to 432GB/sec of memory bandwidth with a 210W TDP. Meanwhile, the RTX 4000 has 6144 CUDA cores at up to 2.2GHz, with 20GB of GDDR6 ECC memory at 18Gbps on a 160-bit memory bus with up to 360GB/sec of memory bandwidth and a 130W TDP.
NVIDIA's new RTX 5000, RTX 4500, and RTX 4000 workstation cards use a PCIe 4.0 x16 interface, with 4 x DisplayPort 1.4a connectors, while the RTX 4000 sports a mini-DisplayPort connector.
NVIDIA will be shipping these new RTX workstation cards later in the year, with the company teasing 4 x RTX 6000 workstation cards with up to 192GB of VRAM possible for advanced workloads.