The NVIDIA RTX A2000 is a mid-range, Ampere-based professional graphics card. It represents a solid upgrade from the previous P2000 model, with the addition of specialized ray tracing and machine learning inference hardware alongside substantially more video memory. This card also supports a wide range of standards: DirectX 12, Vulkan, OpenGL 4.5, CUDA 11, and OpenCL (to name a few).
To complement its focus on professional applications, the RTX A2000 supports up to four monitors at the same time. Four Mini DisplayPort 1.4a outputs are physically present on the back of the card, capable of up to 5K resolution each, and a wide range of adapters are available from third-party vendors if you need to adapt to other video standards like DVI or HDMI. When using such adapters, the maximum resolution will be reduced substantially if not using a DP to HDMI 2.0 Active adapter.
To complement its focus on professional applications, the RTX A2000 supports up to four monitors at the same time. Four Mini DisplayPort 1.4a outputs are physically present on the back of the card, capable of up to 5K resolution each, and a wide range of adapters are available from third-party vendors if you need to adapt to other video standards like DVI or HDMI. When using such adapters, the maximum resolution will be reduced substantially if not using a DP to HDMI 2.0 Active adapter.
William George (Marketing Project Manager) Says:
This is a great mid-range GPU, ideal for applications that need a "professional grade" video card but don't require cutting-edge 3D performance. It also supports 10-bit color, so it is a great choice for Photoshop users with high-end, 10-bit capable monitors. If you don't fall into one of those categories, though, a GeForce card around the same price will give more raw 3D performance in most situations... or, of course, a more powerful NVIDIA RTX A-series card.
This is a great mid-range GPU, ideal for applications that need a "professional grade" video card but don't require cutting-edge 3D performance. It also supports 10-bit color, so it is a great choice for Photoshop users with high-end, 10-bit capable monitors. If you don't fall into one of those categories, though, a GeForce card around the same price will give more raw 3D performance in most situations... or, of course, a more powerful NVIDIA RTX A-series card.
Model: PNY VCNRTXA200012GB-PB
Specifications
Chipset Manufacturer | NVIDIA |
Product Line | Quadro |
Series | Ampere Workstation |
Motherboard Connection | PCI Express x16 |
Interface | PCI Express 4.0 x16 |
Maximum Digital Resolution | 7680x4320 |
Maximum DisplayPort Resolution | 7680x4320 |
Maximum Monitors Supported | 4 |
HDCP Compliant | Yes |
Multi-GPU Technology | Not Available |
TGP | 140 W |
GPU Specifications | |
Stream Processors | 3328 |
Tensor Cores | 104 |
Memory Specifications | |
Video Memory | 12GB |
Memory Type | GDDR6 |
Memory Bus Width | 192-bit |
Bandwidth | 288 GB/s |
Performance | |
Single Precision Floating Point (Peak) | 8 Tflops |
Additional Information | |
Cooling System | Blower Type |
DirectX Support | DirectX 12 |
CUDA Support | 11 |
OpenGL Support | 4.5 |
Removable Backplate | No |
Slot Width | 2 |
Quadro Sync Support | No |
Outputs | |
Port 1 | Mini DisplayPort |
Port 2 | Mini DisplayPort |
Port 3 | Mini DisplayPort |
Port 4 | Mini DisplayPort |
Dimensions | |
Length | 167.6 mm (6.6 in) |
Height | 69 mm (2.7 in) |
Width | 40 mm (1.6 in) |
Net Weight | 0.446 kg (1.0 lbs) |