Nvidia RTX 4090 GPU could blow the RTX 3090 out of the water

Nvidia RTX 3090 being held close to camera
(Image credit: Nvidia)

We’ve been treated to a fresh update on higher-end Lovelace graphics cards from a regular source of Nvidia leaks on Twitter, who provided a few more specifics, including some eye-opening info on the RTX 4090.

This comes from Kopite7kimi, who gave us a whole bunch of details on these incoming GPUs only a week and a half ago.

As you might imagine, in such a short space of time, a lot of the purported specs spilled have stayed the same as in the previous leak from Kopite7kimi. But there are a few key differences here, notably some nippy-sounding clock speeds for the flagship Lovelace graphics card (building on what the leaker recently hinted at).

The speed that the RTX 4090 runs at is set to be a base clock of 2235MHz with a boost to 2520MHz, although the actual maximum that overclocking could reach is in excess of 2750MHz, the leaker believes (and it is just that – a belief in what they’ve been told by sources – so let’s not read too much into any of this just yet).

Kopite7kimi also pins a power usage of 450W on the Lovelace flagship, which matches what we’ve heard previously. The RTX 4090 will be a cut-down AD102 chip, of course, and power usage could be pushed a lot further (like to 600W) with the full-fat version (that could be a 4090 Ti, or maybe even a new RTX Titan).

The info on the RTX 4080 is again pretty much the same story, except now Kopite7kimi thinks that the 16GB of VRAM will be GDDR6X – the leaker wasn’t sure on this last time – and the prediction of that RAM being 18Gbps has been revised upwards to 21Gbps, so that’s some good (theoretical) news.

Power usage is pegged at 420W, which is again repeating what the leaker said a month ago, albeit they added a question mark to that wattage back then – so this seems to indicate that Kopite7kimi is becoming more confident that this is the level the RTX 4080 could be pitched at.

Finally, regarding the RTX 4070, there’s nothing new in terms of the spec since Kopite7kimi’s last major update. A 300W power usage is again mentioned, which has been the leaker’s best guess for some time now. Indeed, Kopite7kimi first floated that figure back in April, before even having much of a clue about the RTX 4080’s power demands.


Analysis: A Lovelace flagship that’s twice as powerful as the RTX 3090?

What’s quite telling here is that some of the power usage figures given appear to have been maintained as predictions for some time now, which suggests that these might just be set in stone, as it were. Or at least they could now represent a more likely correct estimate of where Nvidia will end up with TGPs for RTX 4000 graphics cards.

None of the info provided here is much of a surprise, then, and it’s more about consistency than fresh revelations – with the exception of those specific (purported) clock speeds for the RTX 4090. With 2750MHz plus being mentioned, Nvidia seems to be looking towards the 3GHz mark for the flagship, as opposed to the far more conservative clocks seen on current-gen Ampere (the 3090 has a boost speed of 1.7GHz, as officially rated by Nvidia – though it can, of course, be pushed faster – and even the Ti version only hits 1.86GHz).

And with the RTX 4090 loaded up with CUDA Cores as it is – 16,384 of them – coupled with that theoretical 50% increase in boost speed, this points towards a pretty powerful next-gen flagship. In fact, it could be twice as powerful as the RTX 3090, which is a performance leap we’ve seen predicted before, as you may recall.

While nothing is mentioned about other clock speeds here, looking at the relative CUDA Core counts, and the RTX 4080 coming pretty close to the RTX 4090 for TGP (420W versus 450W), it’s easy to imagine that the 4080 will push harder still with its clock speeds.

It makes sense that Nvidia would want to be driving as hard as it can to get the best gains possible from the advantageous drop to 5nm architecture with Lovelace, and indeed with the flagship, there’ll be plenty of room to build something even beefier than the initial 4090 (remember, we’re looking more at 600W for the 4090 Ti, as per the rumor mill).

Finally, it’s worth noting that even though it’s not new info, there’s still disappointment being aired online around the purported memory loadout of the RTX 4070, and that it might only be 10GB of VRAM. Previous rumors suggested a more palatable 12GB, but it seems that this configuration might be reserved for a 4070 Ti model – take all of this with the appropriate helping of salt, naturally.

Via Wccftech

TOPICS

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).

Read more
The power connector for an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics card
Nvidia RTX 5000 prediction suggests RTX 5090 will be a monster flagship GPU... but it’s the RTX 5070 I’m worried about
Moody shot of an Nvidia GPU
Nvidia RTX 5090 FE rumor claims high-end GPU gets loud - but other reports tell a very different story
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000 GPU on a green patterned background.
A possible Nvidia RTX 5090 prototype shows what might have been – an absolute monster with nearly 25K CUDA cores and an 800W TDP
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000 GPU on a green patterned background.
Nvidia unveils new GeForce RTX 5090, RTX 5080, RTX 5070 Ti, and RTX 5070 graphics cards at CES 2025
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super on a desk
What to expect from Nvidia in 2025
An Nvidia RTX 4090
Uh oh... Zotac just leaked Nvidia’s next-gen launch line-up, including RTX 5090 GPU with 32GB of VRAM
Latest in GPU
An AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT made by Sapphire on a table with its retail packaging
Bad news PC gamers - it seems AMD's aggressively low price for its Radeon RX 9070 GPU will only be for a limited time
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Series image
Nvidia's 572.70 Game Ready Driver promises a black screen fix - but unless you have an RTX 5070 it's probably best to avoid updating for now
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 resting on an RTX 5090 on a gray crafting mat.
Corsair tells us only one of its prebuilt PCs with an RTX 5000 GPU has suffered from chip-level fault, suggesting it’s as rare as Nvidia claimed
An AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT made by Sapphire on a table with its retail packaging
Last-minute AMD RX 9070 XT stock rumors are making me hopeful for a much better launch than Nvidia’s RTX 5000 GPUs – with just one snag
The Nvidia and AMD logos clashing with lightning bolts around them.
Sure, Nvidia DLSS 4 is incredibly impressive - but AMD's improved upscaling tech could be a real game-changer
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070
Nvidia confirms that an RTX 5070 Founders Edition is coming... just not on launch day
Latest in News
Stock photographs of people smiling and looking at laptops in a small business environment.
This web hosting platform elevates your online presence
The Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge on display at Galaxy Unpacked
Exclusive: the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge will have durability to match its ‘sexy’ form
Metaphor: ReFantazio
Sega was Metacritic's highest-rated publisher of 2024 thanks to the critically acclaimed Metaphor: ReFantazio and Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth
AirPods Pro Review
Apple has quietly updated its guidance on how to clean your AirPods, and suggests you buy a kit… from Belkin
China
Chinese hackers who targeted key US infrastructure charged by Justice Department
A screen shot of Lady Gaga in her interview with Zane Lowe for Apple Music
Lady Gaga’s Spotify press conference is being live streamed today – here’s where you can watch Spotify’s big step forward in fan inclusion