This morning AMD is taking the wraps off of a new high-end video card aimed at the workstation market, the Radeon Pro VII. True to its namesake, this is a professional version of the Radeon VII, which was first launched last year, incorporating AMD’s Vega 20 GPU and its full suite of pro-grade features. Taking the place at the top of AMD’s Radeon Pro stack of video cards, the Radeon Pro VII is aimed at AMD’s biggest workload customers in the CAD/CAM, media, and HPC workstation industries, who are willing to pay a premium for AMD’s fastest workstation card yet.

Like its namesake, the Radeon Pro VII is based on the company’s Vega 20 GPU, which when it launched in late 2018 was AMD’s first 7nm GPU. And though AMD is now on to their newer Navi architecture for graphics workloads, Vega 20 remains AMD’s single most powerful GPU to date. This is particularly evident in mixed graphics/compute or pure-compute workloads, where Vega 20’s unique features like fast double precision support, extreme memory bandwidth, and external Infinity Fabric links are not matched by any other card, and have become the backbone of AMD’s compute-focused Radeon Instinct MI50 and MI60 cards.

All told, AMD hasn’t produced a card like the Radeon Pro VII in quite some time. There have been numerous Radeon Pro cards over the last few years, but all of these were based on AMD’s more broad-market consumer and workstation GPUs. The Radeon Pro VII, by contrast, is AMD’s first professional card since 2014 that ticks all the boxes for both graphics and compute, offering significant rendering capabilities paired with the widest array of GPU compute features that AMD offers. In short, this is the card for workstation users who need it all, and they need it all in a single product.

AMD Workstation Card Specification Comparison
  Radeon Pro
VII
Radeon VII Radeon Pro
W5700
Radeon Pro
WX 9100
CUs 60 60 36 64
ROPs 64 64 64 64
Boost Clock ~1700MHz 1750MHz ~1930MHz 1500MHz
Memory Clock 2.0Gbps HBM2 2.0Gbps HBM2 14 Gbps GDDR6 1.89Gbps HBM2
Memory Bus Width 4096-bit 4096-bit 256-bit 2048-bit
Single Precision 13.1 TFLOPs 13.8 TFLOPs 8.89 TFLOPs 12.3 TFLOPs
Double Precision 6.5 TFLOPs
(1/2 rate)
3.5 TFLOPS
(1/4 rate)
556 GFLOPs
(1/16 rate)
769 GFLOPs
(1/16 rate)
VRAM 16GB 16GB 8GB 16GB
ECC Yes Yes No Yes (DRAM)
TDP 250W 300W 205W <250W
GPU Vega 20 Vega 20 Navi 10 Vega 10
Architecture Vega
(GCN 5)
Vega
(GCN 5)
RDNA (1) Vega
(GCN 5)
Infinity Fabric Link Yes (2x) No No No
Manufacturing Process TSMC 7nm TSMC 7nm TSMC 7nm GloFo 14nm
Launch Date 06/2020 02/2019 11/2019 10/2017
Launch Price (MSRP) $1899 $699 $799 $2199

By the numbers, the Radeon Pro VII is a capable replacement for the Radeon Pro WX 9100 in AMD’s product stack. Similar to what we’ve seen there, AMD is swapping out older Vega 10 cards for newer and more powerful Vega 20 cards. The results from a performance perspective make the Radeon Pro VII the most powerful pro card in AMD’s arsenal, though the gains over the WX 9100 are a mixed bag.

With 60 active CUs and a boost clockspeed of roughly 1700MHz, on paper the Radeon Pro VII is not terribly faster in FP32 compute/graphics workloads than the WX 9100 it replaces; the clockspeed boost afforded by 7nm has been tempered somewhat by the lower CU count. Instead, what makes the Radeon Pro VII stand out is everything it can do that the WX 9100 could not, starting with double precision performance. Thanks to Vega 20, the card offers half-rate FP64 performance, giving it a peak throughput of 6.5 TFLOPs, over 8x that of the WX 9100, and almost 2x that of the consumer Radeon VII.

Backing the new pro card and its capabilities is a greatly enhanced memory controller backend. AMD has gone for a 4 stack HBM2 configuration, which with a memory clockspeed of 2Gbps/pin gives the card a total memory bandwidth of 1TB/second. This is more than double the bandwidth available on any other Radeon Pro card, and its why paper specifications only go so far. For extremely heavy workloads that will end up chewing up memory bandwidth – particularly anything pushing a lot of pixels – the Radeon Pro VII is much better equipped. And, of course, as a native feature of HBM2, it offers ECC memory protection.

The new card also comes with a couple of different and notable boosts to input/output options. First and foremost, the Radeon Pro VII comes with support for AMD’s external Infinity Fabric Link, which was first deployed in the Radeon Instinct MI50/MI60. The single connector along the top of the card provides for two IF links, offering a total of 168GB/sec of bandwidth (84GB/sec in each direction) between a pair of video cards. As with its Radeon Instinct implementation (and NVIDIA’s rival NVLink), the idea here is to allow both cards to more closely and efficiently work together for better multi-GPU performance, as well as for pooling the cards’ respective memory pools. This is accomplished by taking advantage of the better bandwidth and lower latency offered by IFLink, which is several times better than what PCI Express can provide. That said, because the technology is still relatively new for AMD’s GPUs, for graphics/rendering workloads it’s currently only supported with AMD’s ProRender 2.0 software.

Speaking of PCI Express, the Radeon Pro VII also ships with PCIe 4.0 support. Though not the first Pro card to get it – last year’s Radeon Pro W5700 technically wins that race – this is the first time that PCIe 4.0 support has been enabled in a high-end Pro card.

In fact, compared to the consumer Radeon VII, the Radeon VII Pro is in many respects a Radeon VII with all of the shackles thrown off. Features like PCIe 4.0 and fast FP64, which were restricted in the consumer card, are being made available for the first time in a workstation graphics card. This is what makes the Radeon Pro VII a jack of all trades within AMD’s product stack, as it offers all of AMD’s graphics features along with numerous compute and I/O features that previously were limited to their compute-focused Radeon Instinct cards.

With a full-featured Vega 20-based graphics card in hand, AMD is intending to chase the high-end of the workstation market with their latest hardware. This includes the CAD/CAM market, the media and broadcast market, as well as the market for HPC development. This collection of industries is a bit eclectic, but it reflects the markets and use cases where AMD believes the Radeon Pro VII’s unique features like fast FP64 support and IFLink will prove especially advantageous. Or to flip this argument on its head, these are the markets where more limited cards like the WX 9100 weren’t very well suited.

I suspect that the card will be especially welcomed by AMD’s compute customers, who up until now haven’t had a proper workstation version of Vega 20. In many cases HPC development is done locally with workstation cards, and then rolled out to larger servers and server clusters running numerous compute cards. Having identical hardware available locally makes it a lot easier to develop and optimize applications, so the Radeon Pro VII is well-suited to help HPC developers assemble programs for Radeon Instinct clusters, as well as the forthcoming El Capitan and Frontier supercomputers.

Meanwhile, in the broader competitive market the Radeon Pro VII will be going up against NVIDIA’s Quadro RTX cards. As is usually the case, AMD is focusing on their value proposition, not so subtly calling out the very high prices that NVIDIA charges for its Quadro cards. While the Radeon Pro VII has no perfect analog within NVIDIA’s product stack, the only card the company offers with quite the same mix of features – particularly FP64 performance – is their top-tier Quadro GV100. Otherwise, at an MSRP of $1899, the Radeon Pro VII is set to be cheaper than the Quadro RTX 8000, 6000, and 5000.

Overall, AMD should have little trouble delivering a better value; however the challenge for the company, as always, is convincing a conservative and slow-moving workstation graphics card market to switch to AMD. NVIDIA is well-entrenched here, and even though they’ve been significantly undercutting NVIDIA over the years, AMD has still needed to fight hard for workstation market share. The Radeon Pro VII, they hope, will help to finally break that logjam.

With all of that said, however, the timing of the Radeon Pro VII’s launch is particularly odd. AMD has been sitting on the basic hardware for quite a while now – the consumer Radeon VII went on sale over a year ago and has already been retired – so to launch a card now, so late into the current GPU technology cycle is rather unusual. Had AMD released this card a year ago, they could have enjoyed an extra year of sales before the competitive landscape significantly changed.

When I asked AMD about this odd timing, the response from the company was that the Radeon Pro VII launch is in response to professional customers using the consumer Radeon VII in workstations. Apparently the card was popular enough there to warrant AMD releasing a formal Pro version of the card, with all the bells and whistles like IFLink and fast FP64 turned on. While it’s not clear if this is from a broad range of requests or being driven by a small number of OEMs, I get the distinct impression that a Radeon Pro VII wasn’t originally in AMD’s product plans; in other words, it’s a launch being driven by customer demand.

Wrapping things up, the Radeon Pro VII will begin shipping in mid-June for $1899. Meanwhile, AMD’s OEM partners will begin shipping systems incorporating the card in the second half of the year.

Source: AMD

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  • Smell This - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link


    I suspect a good many went into the "clusters" -- otherwise, the 300w VII's w/o IF links are still out there. For $1K new, that is ...
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    Earlier this year, you could even find new ones still in the retail channel for < $600. I think $570 is about the cheapest I saw. But they all seem to be gone.
  • BaronMatrix - Thursday, May 14, 2020 - link

    @gsalkin

    That's what this is.. The Pro II is called that because it's an MCM board with custom features specifically for Apple...
  • katherinedmathis50 - Friday, May 29, 2020 - link

    I’ve made $66,000 so far this year w0rking 0nline and I’m a full time student. I’m using an 0nline business opportunity I heard about and I’ve made such great m0ney. It’s really user friendly and I’m just so happy that I found out about it… ­­w­w­w.iⅭ­a­s­h­68­.Ⅽ­O­Ⅿ­
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    Hmmm... basically the Mac Pro's Radeon Pro Vega II, but without the Thunderbolt stuff.

    It's surprisingly only in how long it's taken to come to market - a full 1.5 years after Vega 20 first shipped in the Radeon Instinct cards (which are not proper graphics cards, as they lack video connectors).

    And it makes the Radeon VII seem like the bargain of the decade (i.e. the previous decade), if you need that sort of thing.
  • André - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    I don't think the Radeon Pro Vega II has 1/2 rate double precision.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    Hmmm... the internet seems strangely devoid of that information.
  • rdgoodri - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    No kidding!
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    > With all of that said, however, the timing of the Radeon Pro VII’s launch is particularly odd.

    No kidding. They really should've launched it with the Threadripper 3000-series. PCIe 4.0 would've been a good selling point for those in the TR workstation market, and (as noted) a good point of differentiation vs. the Radeon VII.

    Speaking of differentiation, I really wonder why only 16 GB, though. If people are using these for non-realtime rendering, I'm sure the extra RAM would be useful.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    From one of AMD's slides (the one with the boat in dry dock):

    > Untethered VR Support

    What's all this, then?

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