Nvidia has now launched its replacement for the long-lived Geforce GTX 1030 called Geforce GTX 1630. Here, however, we do not see an Ampere-based device but a graphics card based on the older architecture Turing.
Nvidia’s latest graphics card launch does not include a high-performance device based on Ampere or the upcoming Lovelace architecture. This time, the launch consists of a new Turing device that will be a new entry-level model in Nvidia’s product catalog.
The new graphics card goes by the name Geforce GTX 1630 and takes over the baton from Geforce GTX 1030, which was launched just over five years ago.
In terms of specifications, as previously mentioned, a Turing-based graphics processor is responsible for computing power. Thus, we see no RT cores for hardware-accelerated raytracing or support for technologies like Nvidia DLSS. The graphics processor is based on TU117 which was manufactured on a 12 nanometer manufacturing process and launched in 2019.
We see eight calculation units with a total of 512 CUDA cores, 32 TMU and 32 ROP. The device comes with four gigabytes of GDDR6 video memory that operates over a 64-bit wide memory bus. This with a turbo frequency that extends to 1,785 Mhz.
This is a model that will be compared to AMD’s Radeon RX 6400 and Intel’s recently launched Arc A380. The Geforce GTX 1630 comes with a target price of 150 dollars, which will be around 1,900 kronor. Nvidia has not shown any of its own reference model of the graphics card, but partner-made GTX 1630 devices should appear in stores soon.
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