Just as it did with the RTX 5090 and RTX 4090, Nvidia created a China-exclusive variant of the RTX Pro 6000, the RTX 6000D, only for the Cyberspace Administration of China to ban the product and encourage adoption of homegrown AI accelerators.
Despite those restrictions, someone has benchmarked the now contraband 6000D in Geekbench 6.5, GPU boasting an OpenCL score just ahead of the RTX 5090D V2 and just below the RTX Pro 6000.
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|
GPU |
Geekbench OpenCL |
|
RTX Pro 6000 (server edition) |
410,605 |
|
RTX 6000D |
390,656 |
|
RTX 5090D V2 |
386,710 |
|
RTX 5090D |
383,317 |
|
RTX 5090 |
382,285 |
|
RTX Pro 6000 (workstation edition |
373,979 |
That’s not a big gap, especially considering the spec difference between the two RTX 6000 series GPUs. The RTX Pro 6000 comes with 96GB of GDDR7 operating on a 512-bit interface, spread over 32 chips with 3GB of capacity each. The GPU also comes with 24,064 CUDA cores split across 188 SMs.