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Exxact Valence—a working person’s workstation

High-performance components in a no-nonsense box.

Jon Peddie

The Exxact Valence workstation prioritizes performance over aesthetics. Basic configuration starts at $6,215 with AMD Threadripper Pro 9965WX, 16GB DDR5, and Nvidia A400. Maximum specs reach $56,039 with 96-core CPU, four RTX Pro 6000 GPUs, and extensive memory. It targets professional buyers needing serious computational power, not flashy marketing.

The Exxact Valence workstation isn’t going to win any beauty prizes. It’s designed to move AMD and Nvidia products and be a high-performance workstation.

Valence

(Source: Exxact)

To start, the basic Exxact Valence comes equipped with:

You can get the basic workstation described above for $6,215.00. If you put the max AIBs in, four Nvidia RTX Pro 6000s, and a 2500 W PSU, the cost jumps up to $32,262/50; they go for $7,733 each from Exxact. The minimum AIB you can select is the Nvidia A400 for $1,690.40.

Then, if you add memory, say 128GB RAM of 6400 MT/s and ~ 4TB SSD, you can push the cost up to $47,206.

You can make it even more powerful by upgrading the cup to a Ryzen Threadripper Pro 9995WX–96-core, 2.5 GHz with 384MB L3 cache, and now you’d be looking at a $56,039.50 workstation.

This is a workstation designed for someone who knows what they want and isn’t looking for a bunch of fancy words to describe how they will become a rock star using it for simulations or photorealistic rendering. It’s what my grandmother used to call a meat-and-potatoes dish—gravy is extra.

It’s a workstation designed for a buyer, not a shopper. And it’s also a good price catalog for the components. 

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