NVIDIA Quadro P4200 Mobile

NVIDIA Quadro P4200 Mobile

NVIDIA Quadro P4200 Mobile is a Professional video accelerator from NVIDIA. It began to be released in February 2018. The GPU has a boost frequency of 1647MHz. It also has a memory frequency of 1502MHz. Its characteristics, as well as benchmark results, are presented in more detail below.

Basic

Label Name
NVIDIA
Platform
Professional
Launch Date
February 2018
Model Name
Quadro P4200 Mobile
Generation
Quadro Mobile
Base Clock
1227MHz
Boost Clock
1647MHz
Shading Units
?
The most fundamental processing unit is the Streaming Processor (SP), where specific instructions and tasks are executed. GPUs perform parallel computing, which means multiple SPs work simultaneously to process tasks.
2304
SM Count
?
Multiple Streaming Processors (SPs), along with other resources, form a Streaming Multiprocessor (SM), which is also referred to as a GPU's major core. These additional resources include components such as warp schedulers, registers, and shared memory. The SM can be considered the heart of the GPU, similar to a CPU core, with registers and shared memory being scarce resources within the SM.
18
Transistors
7,200 million
TMUs
?
Texture Mapping Units (TMUs) serve as components of the GPU, which are capable of rotating, scaling, and distorting binary images, and then placing them as textures onto any plane of a given 3D model. This process is called texture mapping.
144
L1 Cache
48 KB (per SM)
L2 Cache
2MB
Bus Interface
MXM-B (3.0)
Foundry
TSMC
Process Size
16 nm
Architecture
Pascal
TDP
100W

Memory Specifications

Memory Size
8GB
Memory Type
GDDR5
Memory Bus
?
The memory bus width refers to the number of bits of data that the video memory can transfer within a single clock cycle. The larger the bus width, the greater the amount of data that can be transmitted instantaneously, making it one of the crucial parameters of video memory. The memory bandwidth is calculated as: Memory Bandwidth = Memory Frequency x Memory Bus Width / 8. Therefore, when the memory frequencies are similar, the memory bus width will determine the size of the memory bandwidth.
256bit
Memory Clock
1502MHz
Bandwidth
?
Memory bandwidth refers to the data transfer rate between the graphics chip and the video memory. It is measured in bytes per second, and the formula to calculate it is: memory bandwidth = working frequency × memory bus width / 8 bits.
192.3 GB/s

Theoretical Performance

Pixel Rate
?
Pixel fill rate refers to the number of pixels a graphics processing unit (GPU) can render per second, measured in MPixels/s (million pixels per second) or GPixels/s (billion pixels per second). It is the most commonly used metric to evaluate the pixel processing performance of a graphics card.
105.4 GPixel/s
Texture Rate
?
Texture fill rate refers to the number of texture map elements (texels) that a GPU can map to pixels in a single second.
237.2 GTexel/s
FP16 (half)
?
An important metric for measuring GPU performance is floating-point computing capability. Half-precision floating-point numbers (16-bit) are used for applications like machine learning, where lower precision is acceptable. Single-precision floating-point numbers (32-bit) are used for common multimedia and graphics processing tasks, while double-precision floating-point numbers (64-bit) are required for scientific computing that demands a wide numeric range and high accuracy.
118.6 GFLOPS
FP64 (double)
?
An important metric for measuring GPU performance is floating-point computing capability. Double-precision floating-point numbers (64-bit) are required for scientific computing that demands a wide numeric range and high accuracy, while single-precision floating-point numbers (32-bit) are used for common multimedia and graphics processing tasks. Half-precision floating-point numbers (16-bit) are used for applications like machine learning, where lower precision is acceptable.
237.2 GFLOPS
FP32 (float)
?
An important metric for measuring GPU performance is floating-point computing capability. Single-precision floating-point numbers (32-bit) are used for common multimedia and graphics processing tasks, while double-precision floating-point numbers (64-bit) are required for scientific computing that demands a wide numeric range and high accuracy. Half-precision floating-point numbers (16-bit) are used for applications like machine learning, where lower precision is acceptable.
7.437 TFlops

Miscellaneous

Vulkan Version
?
Vulkan is a cross-platform graphics and compute API by Khronos Group, offering high performance and low CPU overhead. It lets developers control the GPU directly, reduces rendering overhead, and supports multi-threading and multi-core processors.
1.3
OpenCL Version
3.0
OpenGL
4.6
DirectX
12 (12_1)
CUDA
6.1
Power Connectors
None
ROPs
?
The Raster Operations Pipeline (ROPs) is primarily responsible for handling lighting and reflection calculations in games, as well as managing effects like anti-aliasing (AA), high resolution, smoke, and fire. The more demanding the anti-aliasing and lighting effects in a game, the higher the performance requirements for the ROPs; otherwise, it may result in a sharp drop in frame rate.
64
Shader Model
6.4

FP32 (float)

7.437 TFlops

Blender

549

Compared to Other GPU

SiliconCat Rating

364
Ranks 364 among all GPU on our website
FP32 (float)
Radeon R9 Nano
AMD, August 2015
8.189 TFlops
Quadro RTX 4000 Mobile
NVIDIA, May 2019
7.985 TFlops
Quadro P4200 Mobile
NVIDIA, February 2018
7.437 TFlops
GeForce RTX 3050 6 GB
NVIDIA, February 2024
7.048 TFlops
GeForce GTX 1070
NVIDIA, June 2016
6.725 TFlops
Blender
Radeon RX 6950 XT
AMD, May 2022
2864
Radeon RX 7600M
AMD, January 2023
1338
GeForce GTX 1070 GDDR5X
NVIDIA, December 2018
561
Quadro P4200 Mobile
NVIDIA, February 2018
549
Radeon Vega 8
AMD, January 2021
62