TECH NEWS – After launching the Radeon Pro W7400 for workstations, AMD has now released its desktop version.
The recently launched Radeon Pro W7400 and the newly unveiled Radeon RX 7400 have nearly identical specifications. Both GPUs are based on the RDNA 3 architecture, with the RX 7400 serving as the gaming-oriented version of the Pro 7400, aimed at the cost-effective segment. It recently appeared on Dell’s list of affordable enterprise desktops, hinting at an 8 GB VRAM configuration.
This has been confirmed by AMD’s official specifications, which list 8 GB of GDDR6 VRAM, although it’s slower than the memory in higher-end RX 7000 GPUs. Like the Radeon Pro W7400, the RX 7400 has a memory speed of 10.8 Gbps, delivering a bandwidth of 173 GB/s—around 40% lower than the RX 7600’s. The RX 7600 is its bigger sibling, sharing the same 8 GB / 128-bit memory configuration.
Both cards are built on the Navi 33 chip, but the RX 7400 is a streamlined version with 1,792 shaders. It supports ray tracing (RT) and is the most affordable RT-capable RX 7000 GPU, with 28 ray accelerators. Naturally, you shouldn’t expect playable frame rates with RT enabled, especially when larger models already struggle despite their stronger specs.
The Radeon RX 7400 features a single-slot design and measures just 167 mm in length—the same size as the Pro W7400. With a TBP of only 55 W, it doesn’t require an external power connector, making it ideal for pre-built systems, which is why Dell opted for it. AMD hasn’t confirmed if it will be available as a standalone product, but it’s likely an OEM-specific GPU that will start shipping soon.





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