AMD Updates Embedded Radeon GPU Line, Releases Radeon E8950, E8870, & E6465
by Ryan Smith on October 1, 2015 1:00 PM ESTGiven the long-term nature of AMD’s embedded graphics business, updates to the Embedded Radeon lineup of discrete video cards are fewer and farther between for AMD. But in turn these updates are more substantial for AMD. To that end, this week AMD is announcing the release of a trio of new Embedded Radeon discrete video cards, giving the entire Embedded Radeon lineup its first complete overhaul since 2011.
These products – essentially variants of AMD’s Mobile Radeon parts – are aimed towards non-traditional use cases where vendors need a mix of budget and powerful video cards for what are essentially sealed systems. Among the traditional use cases for these products have been digital signage, image processing/medical imaging, thin clients, and electronic (casino) gaming. The latter in particular is a particularly lucrative market for higher performance GPUs, as casinos increasingly invest in attractive, flashy games, and are competing with similar gaming experiences on mobile devices, which similarly are getting increasingly powerful.
The allure of the Embedded Radeon lineup for vendors, along with having hardware specifically tailored for this market – including features such as natively supported timing customizations – is the long term sales period AMD offers for their embedded products. Embedded Radeon parts are sold for 3 to 5 years, making them suitable for use in products with long production runs where manufacturers need to be able to source new components for an extended period of time.
Altogether AMD’s three new Embedded Radeon products are intended to cover the full range of the market, from high performance down to highly power efficient parts. Furthermore depending on the specific part, AMD offers hardware in three different form factors: PCI-Express (standard and half-height), MXM, and the company’s proprietary high-density soldered MCM form factor.
AMD Embedded Radeon Discrete Video Cards | |||||
Radeon E8950 | Radeon E8870 | Radeon E6465 | |||
Stream Processors | 2048 | 768 | 160 | ||
GPU Clock | 750MHz | 1000MHz | 600MHz | ||
Memory Clock | 6GHz GDDR5 | 6GHz GDDR5 | 3.2GHz GDDR5 | ||
Memory Bus Width | 256-bit | 128-bit | 64-bit | ||
VRAM | 8GB | 4GB | 2GB | ||
Displays | 6 | 6 | 4 | ||
TDP | 95W | 75W | 20W | ||
GPU | Tonga | Bonaire | Caicos | ||
Architecture | GCN 1.2 | GCN 1.1 | Northern Islands |
Starting from the top, the first new Embedded Radeon is the E8950MXM. As alluded to in the name, this product is only available as an MXM card, and is based on AMD’s Tonga GPU. This is a full shader enabled Tonga part with all 2048 SPs enabled and paired with 8GB of GDDR5 (using 8Gb chips), making it roughly analogous to the Radeon R9 M295X. In terms of power consumption the E8950MXM is rated for a 95W TDP.
As the fastest of the Embedded Radeons AMD is pitching this one as their ultra-high performance model, targeting a peak throughput of 3 TFLOPS. Unfortunately AMD’s specs are somewhat at odds with each other, so it’s not clear what this part is clocked at. AMD cites a 1000MHz GPU clockspeed, however the 3 TFLOPS peak number implies 750MHz. Given the 95W TDP, we’re going to assume for the moment that it’s the latter.
Finally as far as feature go, since this is a Tonga part it gets Tonga’s full feature set, including 4K H.264 decode, and like most Graphics Core Next products, the ability to drive up to 6 displays. Typical for the highest performance Embedded Radeon products, this is the only member of the updated Embedded Radeon family to ship with a 3 year sales window as opposed to 5 years on the other products.
Moving on we have the E8870, AMD’s high-performance model. Based on what appears to be a Bonaire GPU in product literature, this is a lower power video card targeting a lower performance segment. Here AMD is aiming for 1.5 TFLOPS peak, with the partially disabled Bonaire GPU running at 1000MHz and shipping with 768 SPs enabled. The E8870 has a lower 75W TDP and is available in both a MXM card and a full-height PCIe card, with both models shipping with 4GB of VRAM. Both models can also be used to drive up to 6 displays, although for the PCIe card there are only 4 physical outputs owing to the space required for the full size DisplayPorts.
Finally, the last of the new Embedded Radeons is essentially a carry-over from AMD’s earlier models, and that’s the E6465. Based on the company’s much older pre-GCN 40nm Caicos GPU, the E6465 is specifically targeted at budget and very low power markets with its 20W TDP. AMD offers the E6465 in all three form factors: an MXM card, a high-height PCIe card with 4 mini-DisplayPorts, and finally the soldered MCM package.
As the E6465 is derived from the previous E6460, the principle purpose in updating it has been to give it a significant upgrade in memory capacity and to reset the clock on availability. The E6465 makes the jump from 512MB to 2GB of VRAM, and meanwhile it gets a fresh 5 year availability cycle that will see it sold through 2020, almost a decade after the Caicos GPU first hit the market.
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ravyne - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link
I would love to see the E8950 end up in one of these Thunderbolt 3 / USB type C laptop docks with discrete GPUs inside. The consumer version (295m) draws a bit too much power and I think only comes in 4GB configs. GCN1.2, 2048 shaders, 8GB and skirting 100w sounds perfect for the application.Meaker10 - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link
MXM board manufacturers can tweak the TDP all they like, it's simply a firmware setting.ImSpartacus - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link
I anticipate that it would end up being more complicated than that.They would want to at least bin for chips that perform more favorably in those circumstances. I wouldn't be surprised if they would want to make other optimizations to stuff like power delivery.
Gigaplex - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link
It's already a mobile destined chip. It should already be binned for lower power usage.ImSpartacus - Friday, October 2, 2015 - link
Embedded systems aren't necessarily mobile, but I know what you mean.It's just that if you have a pile of hundreds of tonga-based gpus in that lovely mxm format, and you're going to separate them into 100W and 50W configurations, then you're probably going to try to intelligently pick the best parts for each group. I would consider that to be "binning".
mczak - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link
Radeon E6465, wow talk about some real vintage chip (Caicos).FWIW the architecture on that isn't exactly "Northern Islands", NI was a _marketing_ family, not a technical (architecture) family. Some of the chips (such as Caicos) were "TeraScale 2", whereas some (the vliw4 ones, albeit in terms of discrete chips that was just one) were "TeraScale 3".
jragonsoul - Friday, October 2, 2015 - link
"Finally, the last of the new Embedded Radeons is essentially a carry-over from AMD’s earlier models, and that’s the E6465. Based on the company’s much older pre-GCN 40nm Caicos GPU, the E6465 is specifically targeted at budget and very low power markets with its 20W TDP. AMD offers the E6465 in all three form factors: an MXM card, a high-height PCIe card with 4 mini-DisplayPorts, and finally the soldered MCM package." Shouldn't that last sentence say HALF-height?