GTX 980 Ti Release Date Delayed To 2016! Production Problems Delay The Launch Of The Much Anticipated Nvidia Flagship Video Card!

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It looks like the December 2014 release of the GTX 980 Ti won't happen after all following a recent report that the GTX 980 Ti production was met with a bit of trouble causing it to be delayed to 2016.

Khalid Moammer of WCCF Tech has claimed that the GTX 980 Ti release date has been delayed to 2016 and he explained what caused the delay:

"According to earlier reports this GPU was originally scheduled to debut on 28nm sometime this year with a 16nm shrink in 2015, a leak later reaffirmed by semiaccurate. Reports had us believe that the 28nm GM200 GPU would debut soon after GM204 but that didn’t happen. Nvidia’s plan for 16nm GPUs was pretty much the same plan for GM204. Which is to introduce the new products in the holiday season. The most profitable season typically in the semiconductor industry and many others."

"GM200 isn’t the only GPU Nvidia has planned for 16nm either. The company still wants to introduce a second revision of GM204 ( GTX 980 and GTX 970 ) in a 16nm flavor. As well as another smaller GM206 GPU which was originally rumored to debut alongside GM204. So we know of at least three Maxwell GPUs which Nvidia is working on. Unfortunately however the delays will put a sizable dent of roughly 3-6 months of delay into Nvidia’s 16nm plans. And the plans of any other company which has 16nm products in the works. Making these TSMC 16nm FinFET delays all the more adverse."

"It typically takes anywhere from four months to a year for a product to make it from mass production to market availability. This leaves a very tight 2-3 month window for 16nm graphics cards to show up in late 2015. But even then it’s unlikely that we’ll see large chips due to the typically less favorable yields at the early life-span of any new process node. This is not unprecedented as Nvidia suffered through serious 28nm yield issues in 2012. Which resulted in the company delaying its entire 28nm GPU lineup. And releasing its first 28nm GPU, the GK104 in the GTX 680, three months after AMD had released Tahiti in the HD 7970 and 7950."

"Which is why we didn’t see Nvidia’s GK110 “big Kepler” GPU show up in a consumer level product until more than 5 quarters after 28nm went into volume production. That is if you count the one thousand dollar GTX Titan as a consumer product. 28nm went into mass production in October of 2011, the GTX Titan was released in February of 2013. It took Nvidia nearly two years after TSMC began 28nm volume production to introduce its large chip in a reasonably priced consumer product for the first time. Which was in the form of the GTX 780 in June of last year."

"GM200 is Nvidia’s large Maxwell GPU. Similar to how GK110 was Nvidia’s large Kepler GPU. And GF100 was that same class of chip for Fermi. These have historically been massive 500mm²+ chips. The sort of chips that you don’t want to necessarily put into production on a new node with dicey yields."

"According to TSMC, the 16nm process should account for 7-9% of total revenue in Q4 2015 for the company. Which means that if any 16nm products make it to market in late 2015 they’ll be very limited in quantity. According to Semiaccurate the first 16nm GPU from Nvidia will be a die shrink of GM204 (GTX 980 and GTX 970) rather than a new GM200 GPU. Which makes the possibility of a GM200 based product arriving in 2015 even more far fetched."

"It’s not all bad news however, although Nvidia has allegedly decided to skip the 20nm node and go straight to 16nm instead. AMD on the other hand has confirmed that it had chip tape outs scheduled for TSMC’s 20nm node last year and said chips are on the way for 2015. With 16nm products planned for 2016 as well. In the case of AMD 16nm delays shouldn’t affect the company’s plans for next year. Since they already have 20nm products coming to address the market in 2015."

With the GTX 980 Ti release date being moved to 2016, how would it affect the sales of the GTX 980 and GTX 970 video cards? What do you think? Sound off in the comments below!

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