A couple of months back AMD announced their third (and presumably final) Polaris GPU, the diminutive Polaris 12. Designing for early-level video cards and laptops, in the consumer space it’s the heart of the Radeon RX 550. Now AMD is now bringing their smallest 14nm GPU to the professionals with the announcement of the Radeon Pro WX 3100 and WX 2100.

The latest Radeon Pro WX cards serve to finish fleshing out the professional lineup, replacing the old Oland-based FirePro W2100. Like its predecessor the new cards are primed for the entry-level market, getting desktop users access to AMD’s pro driver set and certification for a minimal cost, but with performance to match.

AMD Workstation Video Card Specification Comparison
  WX 4100 WX 3100 WX 2100 W2100
Stream Processors 1024 512 512 320
ROPs 16 16 16 8
Boost Clock 1201MHz ~1220MHz ~1220MHz 630MHz
Memory Clock 6Gbps 6Gbps 6Gbps 1.8Gbps
Memory Bus Width 128-bit 128-bit 64-bit 128-bit
VRAM 4GB GDDR5 4GB GDDR5 2GB GDDR5 2GB DDR3
TDP 50W 50W 35W 26W
Display Outputs 4 3 3 2
GPU Polaris 11 Polaris 12 Polaris 12 Oland
Architecture Polaris Polaris Polaris GCN 1.0
Manufacturing Process GloFo 14nm GloFo 14nm GloFo 14nm TSMC 28nm
Launch Date Q4 2016 06/2017 06/2017 08/2014
Launch Price (MSRP) $299 $199 $149 N/A

Both cards are based on the same Polaris 12 GPU. In fact the only difference between them in terms of specifications is the amount of memory bandwidth and the cards’ TDP. Otherwise the two cards are almost identical.

By the numbers then, the Radeon Pro WX 3100 is a “full fat” Polaris 12 card. So all 8 CUs are enabled, as is the 128-bit GDDR5 memory bus. AMD pegs the performance of the card at 1.25 TFLOPS, which works out to a GPU boost clock of about 1220MHz. The card is paired with 4GB of GDDR5 memory, clocked at 6Gbps, for a total memory bandwidth of 96GB/sec.

Comparatively speaking then, the Radeon Pro WX 2100 retains the same core GPU configuration of 8 CUs and a 1220MHz boost clock, but it drops half of the memory bus. The end result is the same theoretical compute/texturing/geometry performance, but only 2GB of GDDR5 and a resulting 48GB/sec of memory bandwidth to do it with.

Otherwise, as you’d expect for entry-level cards, the power consumption of both cards is rather low. The WX 3100 peaks at 50W, and the WX 2100 is even lower, at just 35W. I do have some doubts that AMD could shave 15W just by taking away 2GB of memory, so it may be that the WX 2100 is a bit more prone to throttling.

In any case, the low TDP means that both cards are being offered in the same single slot low-profile design. Though notably, these aren’t AMD’s only low-profile cards, as the more powerful WX 4100 is also a low-profile configuration.

What this low-profile layout affords the user in terms of display outputs then is quite interesting. Like their other pro cards AMD has gone for an all DisplayPort configuration, but rather than using a single port type, AMD is using a mix of full-size and mini DisplayPorts. As a result both cards offer 2x mini DisplayPort 1.4, and another full-size DisplayPort 1.4. Going with a pure DisplayPort configuration is what we’d expect to see, as it allows AMD to drive home the fact that the card can potentially drive up to three 8k monitors. Otherwise the odd mix of ports appears to be due to the fact that the Polaris 12 GPU can only supply 3 display headers (though it has 5 display controllers internally, should you ever use MST).

AMD’s target market for these cards then is very much the entry-level market, where users need access to the Radeon WX driver and support stack, but not large amounts of performance. So less oil & gas, and more simple media and CAD. These new cards will be going up against NVIDIA’s existing Quadro P400 and P600 cards for the low-end of the market.

Wrapping things up, the WX 3100 and WX 2100 should be available from AMD’s usual distributors later this month. The WX 3100 will run for $199, while the WX 2100 will go for $149.

Source: AMD

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  • Arakantos - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Kindly let me know which cards is good for 3ds Max 2014 Rx 480 8Gb else WX 4100, WX3100?
  • olde94 - Monday, June 5, 2017 - link

    Unless drivers make a magical difference of about 3x then your good to go with a 480 ;)
  • Jack324 - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Why? These cards are a joke, even for the pro community. Maybe you might want the four displays, but that can be easily had on regular gaming AMD cards for the same price and much better performance. And the low profile is kind of a joke as well, if you care about performance over form factor, a full size card is the way to go. I'm probably showing my ignorance here, so someone feel free to show me the point I'm missing here.
  • haukionkannel - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Pro drivers...
  • Ej24 - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Ecc memory so there is less chance for errors. Certified drivers. The card is guaranteed to work with cad and 3d software. You know, the type of software that is used to design things like airplanes and cars.
  • ddriver - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Does the "pro" radeon come with ECC memory?
  • ddriver - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    Also, CAD packages work just fine with regular GPUs, sure performance is artificially capped and some features are missing, but it is perfectly usable in most cases. Very big and complex projects might be problematic. But then again, if you that kind of projects, you will most likely be able to afford a top tier firegl or quadro.
  • Space Beer - Monday, June 5, 2017 - link

    Not su true. At least from my experience, glitches are quite common with gaming cards, even with simple 3D models and not so large assemblies. I would rather go for WX 4100 than RX 580 or GTX 1060, and will probaly replace my R7 260X (which is good enough for the models I make) with WX 2100 if it becomes available (and with this price) soon in EU.
  • Streetguru - Tuesday, June 6, 2017 - link

    Pro Cards give you access to True 10-bit color reproduction, so that's important for any artists or graphic designers, at least that's how it worked in the past. Naturally need the super expensive true 10-bit color monitor as well.

    You also buy these for the form factor and TDP, they get the job done and don't run hot at all. They're also useful for the display outputs compared to gaming cards.
  • Ro_Ja - Monday, June 5, 2017 - link

    GPUs that don't need to be tall shouldn't even need to be tall!

    I even wonder why even an entry level gaming card would use two expansion slots.

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