NVIDIA Testing Cooling Modules For Next-Gen GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” Gaming GPUs, 250W To 600W Designs Being Cooked

NVIDIA has started testing and verification of its next-gen cooling modules for its GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” Gaming GPUs.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” Gaming GPUs Being Cooked: Cooling Modules Being Tested With Up To 600W Capacities

NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” Gaming GPUs are expected to launch in the second half of this year, most likely targeting a late Q3 unveil with a launch in Q4. Recent rumors have said that we will first get the GeForce RTX 5080 followed by the GeForce RTX 5090 which means that NVIDIA is going to largely focus on the ultra-enthusiast segment first before it moves into the mainstream segment.

A recent statement from Benchlife seems to indicate that NVIDIA has already started the prep work on the cooling solutions for its next-gen GPUs. Based on information from GPU cooling equipment manufacturers, NVIDIA is already conducting early testing and verification of cooling solutions and modules that will be used on the GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” Gaming GPUs.

A 4-phase plan is also highlighted which could indicate a focus on the ultra-enthusiast segment first that will be followed by high-end, mainstream, and budget graphics cards within the GeForce RTX 50 line of gaming graphics cards. The more important information is that the highest wattage being tested is a 600W SKU while the lowest wattage is a 250W SKU. We have seen similar rumors since the GeForce RTX 30 series where it was expected that GPUs would sip TDPs north of 600W and even up to 900W in prototype stages but those are just that. The actual final designs end up much more power efficient and sip much lower power.

A prototype 900W quad-slot cooler for the NVIDIA Ada GPUs. Image Source: Reddit (Via Gamer2live)

For example, the GeForce RTX 4090 is rated at 450W but its actual power consumption in gaming mostly averages around 400W, and the same is the case with the rest of the lineup. In fact, the entire Ada Lovelace “GeForce RTX 40” GPUs ended up being more power efficient than the prior Ampere generation. Still, NVIDIA is known to have some insane coolers designed during the prototype stage to check the full limits of its gaming architectures.

On the other hand, according to information from the cooling module factory that we are familiar with, NVIDIA has been conducting relevant testing and verification of cooling modules for the GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards based on the Blackwell GPU architecture, and has obviously started preparations for the GeForce RTX 50. Although there is no clear time point, there are currently about 4 plans in progress, with the highest wattage being 600W and the lowest wattage being 250W.

Whether there is a chance to see NVIDIA launch GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards in 2024 is still difficult to say clearly at this stage, but it is certain that AMD will not launch Radeon RX 8000 series graphics cards with RDNA 4 GPU architecture in 2024.

via Benchlife

Furthermore, Benchlife reports that while there is a chance to see NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” gaming GPUs this year, it is unlikely that AMD will release any Radeon RX 8000 chips in 2024 so it looks like Team Green will take all the action on the gaming side.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” GPU Lineup (Preliminary) Specs:

Graphics Card GPU SMs / Cores Memory Configuration TDP
GeForce RTX 5090? GB202 192 / TBD 512-bit (GDDR7) 450W?
GeForce RTX 5090? GB202 192 / TBD 384-bit (GDDR7) 400W?
GeForce RTX 5080? GB203 96 / TBD 256-bit (GDDR7) 320W?
GeForce RTX 5070? GB205 TBD 192-bit (GDDR7) 225W?
GeForce RTX 5060 Ti? GB206 TBD 128-bit (GDDR6?) 160W?
GeForce RTX 5060 GB207 TBD 128-bit (GDDR6?) 120W?

Which NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 GPU are you looking forward to the most?

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