Gamers craving massive video memory might need to wait quite a while for the goods. Reports indicate that an RTX fifty eighty with thirty two gigabytes of vram likely won't hit shelves until the next generation arrives. Unikoshardware claims this configuration was originally meant for cloud servers before the software leaked to the public. While current cards sit at sixteen gigs, technicians in China manage to double that capacity using chips soldered onto both sides of the board. These modified units cannot boot yet because the firmware lacks proper digital signatures from Nvidia to run correctly.
Labs overseas already perform similar surgery on high-end hardware to boost memory for heavy workloads. They strip the core and modules off official boards to plant them on custom blower-style cards that fit extra components on the back. If the manufacturer decides to drop a refreshed lineup later, enthusiasts might see variants with twenty-four or even forty eight gigabytes utilizing different chip densities. Until then, builders must settle for standard specs or hope these unauthorized mods eventually work properly.
Labs overseas already perform similar surgery on high-end hardware to boost memory for heavy workloads. They strip the core and modules off official boards to plant them on custom blower-style cards that fit extra components on the back. If the manufacturer decides to drop a refreshed lineup later, enthusiasts might see variants with twenty-four or even forty eight gigabytes utilizing different chip densities. Until then, builders must settle for standard specs or hope these unauthorized mods eventually work properly.