Draugoth
Gold Member
At least, so says a report on Board Channels (via Videocardz), claiming "Nvidia has completely shut down the AD106 production line, with all its capacity reallocated to the RTX 50 series lines. Only a single AD107 line is temporarily retained. As a result, the RTX 40 series has entered its final quarter of clearance, with mid-to-high-end RTX 40 GPUs gradually halting production and supply. "
This news follows earlier reports in September of Nvidia's plans to end production of the AD102 chip found inside RTX 4090 and 4090D graphics boards. For the record, the AD106 chip is used for the RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4070, while the AD107 is for the 4060 desktop and mobile and 4050 mobile.
The implications of all this are clear enough. If Nvidia is winding down the RTX 40-series family, whatever follows it must be nearly ready for launch. If you assume a typical launch schedule, you would indeed expect Nvidia to wind down high-end GPU models like the 4090 first, given the company typically rolls out premium members of any new GPU generation on day one, with more affordable variants emerging over the following months.
If there is anything surprising about this rumour, then, it's not that some Nvidia RTX 40-series GPUs have stopped production, but that quite so many have. Current rumours suggest Nvidia will unleash the new RTX 5090 and 5080 graphics cards in January, very likely at the CES show in Las Vegas.
via PCGamer