AMD Radeon PRO W9000 Specs Leaked
AMD is preparing to enter the scene with its next-generation workstation graphics cards based on RDNA 4. Although it has not been officially announced yet, according to the posts of Hoang Anh Phu, who is known for his reliable leaks, technical details for the Radeon PRO W9000 family have begun to become clear. While this series is expected to be introduced at Computex 2025, features such as the Navi 48 XTW architecture and 32 GB video memory are particularly noteworthy.
AMD Winks at Next-Generation Workstations with Navi 48 XTW and 32 GB Memory
According to the leaked information, AMD will use the Navi 48 XTW chip in the Radeon PRO W9000 series. This chip can support a maximum of 32 GB GDDR6 memory with a 256-bit memory interface. This can offer a significant advantage for workstation users, especially in professional applications such as CAD, CGI, VR and AI. This model, which will come with 64 Compute Units, is expected to differ in some IP blocks compared to the RX 9070 XT, which uses the same Navi 48 XTX core.
Navi 48 is quite close in size to the GB203 used in NVIDIA’s RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell cards. However, AMD seems to have adopted a more conservative hardware strategy. Compared to NVIDIA’s massive RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell card with 96 GB of memory, it can be said that the W9000 series targets a more accessible segment.
Despite the performance increases that come with the RDNA 4 architecture, it is suggested that the Radeon PRO W9000 may fall behind its predecessor W7900 in memory-intensive workloads. This is a factor that professional users should pay attention to. In addition, the fact that the RDNA 4 architecture is still not officially supported by AMD’s ROCm platform raises some questions on the software side.
In light of all this information, AMD is expected to introduce its new graphics cards at the Computex 2025 event or at the Advancing AI presentation in June. The Radeon PRO W9000 series has already attracted the attention of users looking for an alternative to NVIDIA with both its hardware power and professional solutions for workstations. Let’s see if AMD can meet expectations with software support in this series.
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