Compare any two graphics cards:
VS

GeForce RTX 2080 Ti vs Radeon Pro Duo

Intro

The GeForce RTX 2080 Ti has a GPU clock speed of 1350 MHz, and the 11264 MB of GDDR6 RAM runs at 1750 MHz through a 352-bit bus. It also is comprised of 4352 Stream Processors, 272 TAUs, and 88 Raster Operation Units.

Compare those specs to the Radeon Pro Duo, which comes with a GPU core clock speed of 1000 MHz, and 4096 MB of HBM memory running at 500 MHz through a 4096-bit bus. It also is comprised of 4096 Stream Processors, 256 TAUs, and 64 ROPs.

Display Graphs

Hide Graphs

Benchmarks

These are real-world performance benchmarks that were submitted by Hardware Compare users. The scores seen here are the average of all benchmarks submitted for each respective test and hardware.

3DMark Fire Strike Graphics Score

GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 31381 points
Radeon Pro Duo 27167 points
Difference: 4214 (16%)

Power Usage and Theoretical Benchmarks

Power Consumption (Max TDP)

GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 250 Watts
Radeon Pro Duo 350 Watts
Difference: 100 Watts (40%)

Memory Bandwidth

The Radeon Pro Duo should in theory perform much faster than the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti overall. (explain)

Radeon Pro Duo 1024000 MB/sec
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 630784 MB/sec
Difference: 393216 (62%)

Texel Rate

The Radeon Pro Duo should be a lot (about 39%) better at anisotropic filtering than the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti. (explain)

Radeon Pro Duo 512000 Mtexels/sec
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 367200 Mtexels/sec
Difference: 144800 (39%)

Pixel Rate

If using lots of anti-aliasing is important to you, then the Radeon Pro Duo is a better choice, but not by far. (explain)

Radeon Pro Duo 128000 Mpixels/sec
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 118800 Mpixels/sec
Difference: 9200 (8%)

Please note that the above 'benchmarks' are all just theoretical - the results were calculated based on the card's specifications, and real-world performance may (and probably will) vary at least a bit.

One or more cards in this comparison are multi-core. This means that their bandwidth, texel and pixel rates are theoretically doubled - this does not mean the card will actually perform twice as fast, but only that it should in theory be able to. Actual game benchmarks will give a more accurate idea of what it's capable of.

Price Comparison

Display Prices

Hide Prices

GeForce RTX 2080 Ti

Amazon.com

Check prices at:

Radeon Pro Duo

Amazon.com

Check prices at:

Please note that the price comparisons are based on search keywords - sometimes it might show cards with very similar names that are not exactly the same as the one chosen in the comparison. We do try to filter out the wrong results as best we can, though.

Specifications

Display Specifications

Hide Specifications

Model GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Radeon Pro Duo
Manufacturer nVidia AMD
Year September 2018 April 2016
Code Name TU102-300A-K1-A1 Fiji XT
Memory 11264 MB 4096 MB (x2)
Core Speed 1350 MHz 1000 MHz (x2)
Memory Speed 1750 GB/s 500 MHz (x2)
Power (Max TDP) 250 watts 350 watts
Bandwidth 630784 MB/sec 1024000 MB/sec
Texel Rate 367200 Mtexels/sec 512000 Mtexels/sec
Pixel Rate 118800 Mpixels/sec 128000 Mpixels/sec
Unified Shaders 4352 4096 (x2)
Texture Mapping Units 272 256 (x2)
Render Output Units 88 64 (x2)
Bus Type GDDR6 HBM
Bus Width 352-bit 4096-bit (x2)
Fab Process 12 nm 28 nm
Transistors (Unknown) million 8900 million
Bus PCIe 3.0 x16 PCIe 3.0 x16
DirectX Version DirectX 12 DirectX 12.0
OpenGL Version OpenGL 4.6 OpenGL 4.5

Memory Bandwidth: Bandwidth is the largest amount of data (in units of MB per second) that can be transported over the external memory interface in one second. It is worked out by multiplying the card's interface width by its memory speed. If the card has DDR memory, it must be multiplied by 2 again. If DDR5, multiply by ANOTHER 2x. The higher the card's memory bandwidth, the faster the card will be in general. It especially helps with AA, HDR and higher screen resolutions.

Texel Rate: Texel rate is the maximum amount of texture map elements (texels) that are applied per second. This figure is calculated by multiplying the total number of texture units by the core clock speed of the chip. The better the texel rate, the better the graphics card will be at texture filtering (anisotropic filtering - AF). It is measured in millions of texels processed in a second.

Pixel Rate: Pixel rate is the most pixels that the graphics card can possibly record to its local memory in one second - measured in millions of pixels per second. The number is calculated by multiplying the amount of colour ROPs by the the card's clock speed. ROPs (Raster Operations Pipelines - aka Render Output Units) are responsible for drawing the pixels (image) on the screen. The actual pixel output rate also depends on quite a few other factors, especially the memory bandwidth - the lower the bandwidth is, the lower the ability to get to the max fill rate.

Display Prices

Hide Prices

GeForce RTX 2080 Ti

Amazon.com

Check prices at:

Radeon Pro Duo

Amazon.com

Check prices at:

Please note that the price comparisons are based on search keywords - sometimes it might show cards with very similar names that are not exactly the same as the one chosen in the comparison. We do try to filter out the wrong results as best we can, though.

Comments

Be the first to leave a comment!

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


*

WordPress Anti Spam by WP-SpamShield