Definition of GDDR6 RAM
GDDR6 stands for graphics double data rate 6, comparable to DDR4 or DDR5, the system RAM used in contemporary PCs. GDDR6 is the replacement for GDDR5, and it offers more capacity and bandwidth than its forerunner. The two main forms of memory transfer rates have undergone the most significant advancements. GDDR6 transports a data rate of 14-16 GB per second, which is approximately twice as fast as GDDR5, which transfer data at an 8 GB per second rate. Moreover. GDDR6 has a greater capacity per module than GDDR5. While a GPU actively uses all available VRAM, it is divided into many modules. There are 5 different memory sizes: 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB, 4 GB, and 8 GB.
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