Leaked benchmarks are out for Nvidia’s next-gen Amphere GPU … but I must remind you to take this with a pinch of salt. Apparently it will feature a massive 7552 CUDA cores with 24GB of ram.
Taken from Wccftech … Woah, a major leak of NVIDIA’s upcoming next-generation graphics cards (most probably called Ampere) has just sprung from Geekbench (via _RoGame@Twitter). Not one but two seperate GPUs have been benchmarked showcasing what are quite possibly two graphics cards in NVIDIA’s upcoming lineup. Keep in mind however that these aren’t necessarily Ampere (or Hopper), they could be called something else (it’s really up to NVIDIA) and the company is known to change nomenclature at the last hour.
NVIDIA next-generation graphics cards benchmarked at Geekbench 5: most probably Ampere 7nm GPUs.
The first GPU is one with 7552 CUDA cores and 118 SMs. Interestingly, the performance and the Geekbench read would mean that the rumored 128 cores per SM theory is wrong and the GPUs do have the standard 64 cores per SM. This particular GPU was clocked at 1.11 GHz which would make this a 16.7 TFLOPs part at current speeds. Of course, if these leaks are legit (and I have a feeling they are) then this isn’t the top tier part – which would have 8192 CUDA cores. This GPU has 24GB of memory (although we aren’t sure if Geekbench is detecting this properly).
This particular NVIDIA GPU scores an astounding 184096 points on Geekbench – almost 40% more than the TITAN RTX. Keep in mind these are almost certainly not the final clocks of the graphics card – which would mean overclocking potential is waiting just around the corner. It is also likely that what we are looking at is the data center parts (as NVIDIA almost always launches those first) and not the gaming variants.
The second GPU is one with 6912 CUDA cores and 108 SMs. This lower-powered variant is clocked at 1.01 GHz and clocks in at roughly 13.9 TFLOPs (about the same level as a RTX 2080 Ti). Interestingly this card is being shown as having 47GB of memory, which makes this likely that we are seeing a misread of some sort as far as the memory specifications go. The 6912 CUDA core variant scores 141654 points on Geekbench – slightly higher than an RTX TITAN.
Source: Wccftech