- IT Support
The Difference Between IT Support and IT Consultancy
11 Jan, 2026
£833.28 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The NVIDIA RTX PRO 2000 (Blackwell) is the kind of card you buy when you want “reliable workstation graphics” rather than chasing benchmark glory. For UK business users doing typical professional CAD/CAE, light–mid rendering, or GPU-assisted workflows, the PRO branding usually matters because it’s aimed at stability and driver support in commercial environments. At ~£698 ex‑VAT, it’s not cheap, but it can still be good value if you’re putting it into a workstation that needs to behave day in, day out for users who can’t afford flaky drivers or odd application quirks.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it blindly. If your workloads are more about gaming or general-purpose acceleration where you don’t actually benefit from pro drivers/software validation, you’re likely overpaying. And if your team is doing heavier rendering, large models, or memory-hungry simulations, £698 may not go far enough—those scenarios often justify stepping up to higher tiers rather than trying to “make do” with an entry workstation GPU.
**Who should buy:** small-to-medium design/engineering teams, CAD users, and SMBs standardising on workstation-grade GPUs who care about supported, predictable performance. **Who shouldn’t:** teams with purely casual GPU needs, cost-sensitive upgrades where the software isn’t GPU-accelerated meaningfully, or anyone expecting it to handle demanding production rendering without compromise.

Lenovo
NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada - Graphics card - NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada - 16 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x8 low profile - 4 x DisplayPort

Asus
ASUS Dual - Graphics card - GeForce RTX 5060 - 8 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI - white

Lenovo
Lenovo - Power cable kit - for ThinkStation P5 30G9, 30GA, P620 30E0, 30E1

Asus
DUAL-RX9060XT-16G-WHITE