BOXX launches APEXX T3 workstation with AMD Threadripper 9000 and Blackwell
BOXX has launched its APEXX T3 workstation, featuring AMD Ryzen Threadripper 9000 processors with up to 64 cores and NVIDIA RTX PRO 2000 Blackwell GPUs. This workstation is designed for demanding motion media and 3D content creation applications, catering to professionals in the media and entertainment industry.
Key Takeaways
- Configurable with the 64-core AMD Ryzen Threadripper 9980X, featuring a 5.3GHz boost clock and liquid cooling.
- First implementation of NVIDIA’s RTX PRO 2000 Blackwell GPU, which delivers 16GB of GDDR7 memory and 17 TFLOPS of single-precision performance.
- System supports up to 1TB of quad-channel DDR5-6400 ECC memory across four DIMM slots.
- Internal storage capacity allows for up to four 2.5-inch drives, two 3.5-inch drives, and three M.2 NVMe 5.0 SSDs.
- Promotion offers a $500 discount for customers switching from comparable Dell workstation quotes through June 2026.
Why It Matters
The APEXX T3 release signals a performance-to-footprint ratio shift for professional video production and 3D rendering. By pairing AMD’s Zen 5-based 9000 series with NVIDIA’s low-power Blackwell professional cards, BOXX provides small-form-factor systems capable of handling 8K video and AI-augmented rendering without the power overhead of larger rackmount servers. This launch pressures legacy workstation vendors to accelerate their hardware refreshes as creative pipelines increasingly transition to GPU-heavy Unreal Engine and virtual production workflows. Watch for real-world benchmarks on the 64-core 9980X against Intel’s 60-core Xeon W9-3595X in Adobe Premiere Pro and Maya environments.
Additional Context
The launch of the APEXX T3 aligns with AMD's broader July 2025 release cycle for the Ryzen Threadripper 9000 and PRO 9000 WX-series. These chips are built on the 'Zen 5' architecture and, per Tom's Hardware (July 2025), maintain the previous generation's pricing while delivering up to a 26% generational performance uplift in multi-threaded workloads. AMD’s internal testing suggests that the 64-core variants outperform equivalent Intel Xeon W-3500 offerings by up to 108% in specific media and entertainment tasks like Autodesk Maya rendering and Unreal Engine compilation, according to reports from VideoCardz (June 2026). Simultaneously, NVIDIA's expansion of the Blackwell architecture into the professional workstation segment focuses on efficiency and AI throughput. The RTX PRO 2000 Blackwell featured in the APEXX T3 is a 70W dual-slot card designed for small-form-factor environments. Per CG Channel (August 2025), this GPU offers up to 1.6x faster rendering and 1.4x faster CAD performance compared to the previous Ada Generation equivalent. The inclusion of fifth-generation Tensor Cores specifically targets AI-augmented workflows, such as neural shading and real-time noise reduction in production pipelines. Industry analysts at PCMags (May 2025) note that the chasm between gaming hardware and professional workstations has widened in 2026 due to the specialized requirements of 8K workflows and Nanite-based 3D modeling. Platforms like the APEXX T3, which utilize the TRX50 chipset, provide up to 80 usable PCIe 5.0 lanes. This connectivity is critical for professional studios needing high-bandwidth NVMe RAID arrays and native 12G-SDI capture cards, which typically exceed the I/O capabilities of standard consumer-grade PCs.
Read full article at boxx.com
