Nvidia’s rumored GTX 1630 budget graphics card is reportedly set to come out in just over a week, and we’ve also seen some splits for the GPU.
The latest speculation from Videocards It will be released on May 31 on the GTX 1630, and as a space, it’s basically a cut-down spin on the GTX 1650.
The card will have a TU117-150 GPU (Turing, last-gen) with 512 CUDA cores (meaning half will be disabled). The memory bus will apparently be halved to 64-bit – GTX 1630 with 4GB GDDR6 VRAM (at 12 Gbps). Equipped with overall bandwidth GDDR5 video memory (96GB / s vs 128GB / s) will not be far from the GTX 1650 SKU.
Where the 1630 will be better than the 1650 model is in the boost watch, obviously, which is expected to hit 1,800MHz, has been maintained at TDP 75W, as previously rumored.
Take all of these with you, as always, with a hardware leak.
Analysis: Concerns about performance levels – but price will also matter
The release date is May 31, as mentioned by Videocardz, Nvidia will probably release this budget at GPU Computex, which will take place next week. If this new GTX graphics card is indeed introverted, and the technology site now seems convinced of it, then it makes sense.
On the face of it, the GTX 1630 is cut a bit more than expected, and it looks a bit weak at first glance – the online card certainly has a lot of frustrating feedback (although we’ll never get away with this rumor, as the leaked glasses may not be accurate) , Or at least only partially correct).
Still, speculating that the specs are much more in the right ballpark, initial speculation suggests that this GPU is going to be almost as powerful as a GTX 1050 Ti – but now, some people worry that it could only be the equivalent of Vanilla 1050. Even so, in terms of ramped-up clock speeds, it is still quite possible that we see 1630 to 1050 frame rates (more or less).
Regardless of the performance level of this graphics card – of course, how this GPU will stack up to AMD’s low-end RX 6400 will also be important – it will be priced in terms of Nvidia, and probably the GTX 1630 is cheaper than we expected. Going.
The only thing that hasn’t spread is the price, there’s no indication yet. Rumor has it that Adda has dropped below the $ 200 mark in the US, but maybe Nvidia will push MSRP even lower (maybe $ 150 – even less than a touch?). Then again, ‘logical’ is not a term that is easily associated with GPU pricing these days, although things are now returning to normal with graphics card price tags, slowly but surely. Anyway, Computex is near the corner, and we should then find out the truth behind the GTX 1630 …