Nvidia RTX Pro 6000D squeaks ahead of RTX 5090D in Geekbench OpenCL—China-tailored AI card still performs well despite regulatory woes

Nvidia RTX Pro 6000D squeaks ahead of RTX 5090D in Geekbench OpenCL—China-tailored AI card still performs well despite regulatory woes

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.

The RTX 6000D comes with 14% less memory and memory bandwidth, along with 20% fewer CUDA cores. It has 84GB of GDDR7 memory connected to a 448-bit bus and 19,968 CUDA cores spread across 156 SMs.

Geekbench's OpenCL benchmark represents just one workload, so take these performance results with a pinch of salt. Shader compute performance usually takes the smallest hit on Nvidia's neutered China-exclusive GPUs. AI performance usually takes a much larger hit, and it's that workload that the USA's export controls care about. (These D-series GPUs are designed to comply with the U.S. government's China-specific export regulations on GPUs.)

The RTX 6000D's favorable performance against the RTX Pro 6000 could have been compelling for customers if the price was right, and the card was launched in the right context. The RTX 6000D couldn't have launched into a less favorable environment. Not only did the Chinese government ban the card months after launch —it also purportedly faced tough competition from Chinese GPU manufacturers .

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