AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT with 6nm Navi 24 graphics to rock a boost clock of 2815 MHz & 18 Gbps Memory
AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT with 6nm Navi 24 graphics to rock a boost clock of 2815 MHz & 18 Gbps Memory

AMD is set to reveal two discrete entry-level graphics cards, the Radeon RX 6500 XT & the RX 6400, this week, both utilizing the 6nm RDNA 2 architecture and offering up to 2815 MHz boost clock (set to a game clock level of 2610 MHz). In performance terms, these new GPUs will have close to a 10% boost clock improvement from the previous Navi 23 architecture.
The two newest GPUs from AMD are manufactured with TSMC's N6 technology process, which will be the first GPU to use the newest process node and speculated to be the final Navi series GPU. AMD is expected to switch from utilizing Navi 2X technology to TSMC's 6nm & 5nm technology in the coming future.
AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT Graphics Card With Navi 24 XT GPU
The AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT will be utilizing the full Navi 24 XT GPU die. Internally known as 'Beige Goby', the AMD Navi 24 GPU is the smallest of the RDNA 2 lineup and will feature a single SDMA engine. The chip will feature 2 shader arrays for a total of 8 WGPs and a maximum of 16 Compute Units. AMD has 64 stream processors per compute unit so that brings the total core count on the Navi 24 GPU at 1024 which is half that of the Navi 23 GPU which will offer 2048 stream processors in 32 compute units. The GPU for the RX 6500 XT will be clocked at 2815 MHz boost and 2610 MHz game clock. That's around 5.7 TFLOPs of FP32 performance from the chip.
In addition to the number of cores, each shader array would feature 128 KB of L1 cache, 1 MB of L2 cache and there would also be 16 MB of Infinity Cache (LLC). The AMD Navi 24 RDNA 2 GPUs will also be featured across a 64-bit bus interface & will be featured on low-end Radeon RX 6500 or RX 6400 series parts. The card will feature a bandwidth of 144 GB/s but AMD is coming up with a new marketing name for total bandwidth (including Infinity Cache) which is rated at 232 GB/s. AMD Navi 24 is expected to get some really high clock speeds, even surpassing the 2.8 GHz barrier.
As for the specifications, the AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT graphics card will feature 1024 cores and 4 GB of GDDR6 memory. The card would not be able to operate in any mining algorithm, especially ETH. The top model will feature a TDP of 107W and as such, will require external power connectors to boot. The card is expected to launch on 19th January so expect an announcement at CES 2022.
With this increased memory speed, it was speculated that it will also increase the bandwidth to 144 GB/s. This information is now considered confirmed by Twitter leaker Greymon55.
https://twitter.com/greymon55/status/1478000931442618368
AMD Radeon RX 6400 Graphics Card With Navi 24 XL GPU
The second card in the Navi 24 RDNA 2 lineup is the AMD Radeon RX 6400 which will be based on a slightly cut-down 'XL' chip with 768 cores. The card will retain its 4 GB GDDR6 memory and feature slightly lower clocks but still around the 2.5 GHz+ frequency range. It is reported that the RX 6400 is not going to require any power connectors to boot thanks to its 53W TDP. It will also feature 112 GB/s standard and 232 GB/s IFC bandwidth. While the Radeon RX 6400 is expected to launch a bit later than the 6500 XT, it will likely be kept as an OEM-only model and won't get custom variants. In the official renders, it can be seen that the card is designed for the entry-level and low-profile GPU market with a single-slot and half-height form factor which features a single fan and an HDMI + DP output.
Both GPUs will be aimed at the entry-level segment with MSRPs of sub $200-$250 US. Since the Radeon RX 6600 series is already positioned in the premium 1080p gaming segment, expect the Navi 24 GPUs to be aimed at the entry-level 1080p gaming market. But given that AMD has raised the prices of RDNA 2 GPUs and alerted its AIB partners to do the same too, the entry-level market may end up in another mess for budget builders trying to get on something after years of wait.
News Source: Videocardz
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