AMD Reveals Radeon Pro W7600 and W7500
Jakob Aylesbury / 1 year ago
AMD has today revealed two new cards for the W7000 series product line with the W7600 and W7500 workstation graphics cards.
AMD Radeon Pro W7000
The W7000 Pro series utilises the RDNA 3 Architecture with redesigned compute units, unifying raytracing, AI accelerators and second-gen AMD infinity Cache technology to provide you with a powerful tool for your professional workloads. Whether it’s Media & entertainment, design & manufacturing or engineering and construction, these cards are capable of completing the tasks and heavy workloads for each respective field. The new W7600 and W7500 cards leverage 8GB of high-speed GDDR6 memory to support data intensive tasks.
Features
- AMD RDNA 3 Architecture – Features redesigned compute units, unifying raytracing and AI accelerators, second-generation AMD Infinity Cache technology, and second-generation raytracing technology. It also offers optimizations for AEC, D&M, and M&E workflows for 3D modelling, animation, rendering, video editing, and general multitasking.
- Dedicated AI Acceleration – New AI instructions and increased AI throughput deliver over 2X more performance than the previous generation RDNA 2 architecture.
- AMD Radiance Display Engine with DisplayPort 2.1 – With 12-bit HDR colour support and over 68 billion colours, display outputs support next-generation displays and multi-monitor configuration options, creating an ultra-immersive visual environment.
- Optimized Driver Performance and Professional Application Certification – AMD continues to work with leading professional software application vendors on a comprehensive application certification program and to ensure AMD Radeon PRO graphics cards are built for demanding 24/7 environments and tested to meet exceptional standards.
Price and Availability
The AMD Radeon PRO W7600 and AMD Radeon PRO W7500 will be available in Q3 2023 from leading etailers and retailers for $599 USD and $429, respectively. Product availability in OEM workstations and SI systems is expected later this year.