Remember that unreleased NVIDIA Quad-Slot GeForce RTX 40 GPU cooler that keeps on leaking time and time again? Well, it has leaked once more and this time, we got the full dissection which gives us an in-depth look at the engineering marvel that could've been used for Ada Lovelace GPUs.
The latest dissection comes once again from Goofish seller, Hayaka, who seems to be the only one who has access to this cooler since we haven't seen it leaked anywhere else. The massive cooler is said to be designed for an unreleased GeForce RTX 40 GPU and some say that it's actually an early prototype that was used for the GeForce RTX 4090 (for evaluation purposes) and was a potential solution made for the RTX 4090 Ti and Titan RTX Ada graphics card, both of which are rumored to be cancelled.
We know that this NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 GPU cooler takes up four slots worth of space and while it houses a similar flow-through design with an axial-tech fan on the front side and the bottom side, there seems to be an additional fan that is sandwiched in the middle of heatsink almost as if it's a burger patty. The heatsink itself is simply ginormous with several heatsink fins that were meant to cool the full-fat Ada Lovelace GPUs.
The PCB of this specific NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 graphics card was supposed to be connected vertically and not horizontally like current standard graphics cards. This was going to be a really unique design if it ever came into existence. The power connector was on the other side of the circuit board and there were two massive copper electrical wires leading from the 16-pin power plug and into the PCB. The card was set to be rated well beyond 400W and could've even sipped the full 600W which is the limit of the 12VHPWR
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