In the middle of this week, Intel announced its Intel Arc Pro A60 and Arc Pro A60M graphics cards, graphics cards for desktops and laptops aimed at the professional market. At the time of its announcement, the company did not reveal its specifications, but it has now done so by showing all the details of the Intel Arc Pro A60.
Specifically, this graphics card includes an Intel Xe-HPG GPU 16 Xe Cores with their 16 Raytracing acceleration units and 256 execution units, with which it manages to reach a power of up to 10.04 TFLOPS in single precision calculation. It is accompanied by 12GB of GDDR6 memory with a 192-bit interface with which it achieves 384 GB/s of bandwidth at 16 Gbps. Its maximum peak TGP is 130W in its single slot variant. Its speed in Mhz will depend on the implementation of the card.
The Intel Arc Pro A60 uses a PCI Express 4.0 X16 interface and offers four DisplayPort 4.0 ports with support for a maximum resolution of 7,680 x 4,320 pixels at 60 HZ. Naturally, the drivers are certified and verified to work with the most important design programs.
On the other hand we have the Intel Arc Pro A60M for laptops. This model has the same 16 Xe Cores with its 16 Raytracing accelerators and 256 execution units. In this case, we have a more limited TGP of only 95W with a speed of 1,300 MHz.
The amount of GDDR6 memory is reduced compared to the desktop model, staying at 8 GB and with a 128-bit and 16 Gbps interface. Its total bandwidth is 256 GB/s. It supports the same maximum resolution as its older sister through DisplayPort, but with an integrated connection for laptop panels, we stay at about 5,120 x 2,880 pixels at 60 HZ.
Technical specifications of the Intel Arc Pro A60 and Arc Pro A60M
Intel Arc Pro | A60 (Desktop) | A60M (Portable) |
---|---|---|
Xe Cores | 16 | 16 |
Ray tracing accelerators | 16 | 16 |
EUs | 256 | 256 |
Speed | Depends on the model | 1300MHz |
Fabrication process | TSMC N6 | TSMC N6 |
TGP | 130W | 95W |
Memory | 12GB GDDR6 | 8GB GDDR6 |
Memory Bus | 192 bit | 128 bit |
Bandwidth | 384GB/s | 256GB/s |
Max Resolution | 7,680 x 4,320 pixels | 7,680 x 4,320 pixels |
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Anthony Delgado
Computer Engineer by training, writer and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love gutting everything that comes my way, especially the latest hardware that we receive here for reviews. In my spare time I mess around with 3d printers, drones and other gadgets. For anything here you have me.