Fresh details about an unreleased Nvidia RTX Titan Ada graphics card have surfaced online, courtesy of a GPU-Z screenshot and some PCB photos shared on the Nvidia subreddit. This alleged prototype features a fully unlocked AD102 GPU paired with 48 GB of GDDR6 memory, suggesting a spot higher than the RTX 4090 in NVIDIA's lineup.
Based on the GPU-Z report, the RTX Titan Ada is equipped with 18,432 CUDA cores, 192 ROPs, and 576 TMUs. The card can reach a pixel fillrate of about 478.1 GPixel/s and a texture fillrate of roughly 1,434.2 GTexel/s. Its memory configuration uses standard GDDR6 chips on a 384-bit interface, resulting in 864 GB/s of bandwidth.
Interestingly, the prototype shows a notably low base clock of 735 MHz compared to other RTX 40 models, though it still manages a healthy 2,490 MHz boost clock. These atypical clocks might just be a quirk of the card’s prototype status—particularly the use of GDDR6 instead of the more advanced GDDR6X.
In terms of raw power, the RTX Titan Ada outstrips the RTX 4090 with a higher shader count and greater memory allotment. While the 4090 runs on about 89 percent of the AD102 die, this Titan variant taps into the full silicon. The 48 GB memory layout is achieved through a clamshell design, utilizing GDDR6 modules on both sides of the PCB—similar to what we’ve seen on the RTX 3090 and RTX 6000 Ada.
Why the RTX Titan Ada was possibly canned could be related to its overlap with professional solutions like the pricey US$6,800 RTX 6000 Ada. Additionally, AMD hasn’t really put out anything that directly challenges the RTX 4090, which might’ve made a beefier gaming GPU less of a priority.
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