Recently, graphics card manufacturer Renaissance released two GeForce RTX 30 series models based on NVIDIA Ampere architecture on its official website.This move means that since the architecture was launched in 2020, it will still usher in new product iterations five years later.The two new products on the shelves this time are GeForce RTX 3060 M2521+N630 and GeForce RTX 3050 6GB Nebula Twin. Both follow the core design of the Ampere architecture, maintain existing specifications in terms of process and stream processor scale, and have not made any architectural upgrades.

The RTX 3060 model is equipped with 3584 CUDA cores, with a core base frequency of 1320MHz and a Boost frequency of up to 1777MHz.

The video memory uses 12GB GDDR6 particles, with an equivalent rate of 15Gbps, and a bandwidth of 360GB/s through 192-bit bit width.
It should be pointed out that this version is the original 12GB specification, not the 8GB/128-bit streamlined version subsequently launched by NVIDIA.

The heat dissipation adopts a dual-fan dual-slot design. The card body size is 250×115×42 mm. The power consumption of the entire board is 170W. The output interface provides three DisplayPorts and one HDMI.

Another RTX 3050 6GB Nebula Twin is positioned as a low-power entry-level model.It integrates 2304 CUDA cores, with base and acceleration frequencies of 1042MHz and 1470MHz respectively.

The video memory configuration is 6GB GDDR6, operating at 14Gbps, and relying on 96-bit bit width to provide 168GB/s bandwidth. The entire board power consumption of this card is only 70W. It does not require external auxiliary power supply and can run stably when it is completely powered by the PCIe slot.

The size is controlled at 215×113×39 mm, and the video output covers HDMI, DisplayPort and DVI-D interfaces.Different from the 8GB version in the initial release stage, this 6GB model belongs to the later-adjusted specification branch.
