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Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti review: 4080 territory, or more with an overclock
Digital Foundry tests the GeForce 5070 Ti. On this page: we introduce our test system, benchmarking methodology and initial impressions.
The clock and bandwidth drops are fairly minor, but power usage is more substantial - with a 300W TGP here versus 360W on the 5080. RTX 5090RTX 5080RTX 5070 TiRTX 5070 Processor GB202GB203GB203GB205 Cores 21,76010,7528,9606,144 Boost Clock 2.41GHz2.62GHz2.45GHz2.51GHz Tensor Core TOPS 335218011406988 RT Core TFLOPS 31817113394 Memory 32GB GDDR716GB GDDR716GB GDDR712GB GDDR7 Memory Bus Width 512-bit256-bit256-bit192-bit Memory Bandwidth 1792GB/s960GB/s896GB/s672GB/s Total Graphics Power 575W360W300W250W PSU Recommendation 1000W850W750W650W Power Connector 600W PCIe 5.0 (4x 8-pin)450W PCIe 5.0 (3x 8-pin)300W PCIe 5.0 (2x 8-pin)300W PCIe 5.0 (2x 8-pin) Price$1999/£1939$999/£979$749/£729$549/£539 Release Date January 30thJanuary 30thFebruary 20thFebruaryWe found adding a 450MHz overclock to the 5070 Ti in Afterburner was pretty achieveable, putting the 5070 Ti routinely north of 3GHz without a problematic increase in power draw - at least, certainly nothing that will bother the hefty cooler or cause you anguish with your electricity provider. The end result is that the 5070 Ti nudges ahead of the RTX 4080 Super, and that's without being able to increase the power limit beyond the standard 100 percent - something Nvidia says is a bug that ought to be resolved, unlocking further gains.
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