Someone found the new NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti graphics card in the Furmark testing database, giving us an early peek at how fast it runs. The card showed up three different times with the code name 10DE-2D04. Each test tells us something different about how well this card performs. During one test with remote desktop, it scored 5634 points at 93 frames per second, with clock speeds hitting 1238 MHz. Another test showed much better results with 10242 points and 170 FPS at 1080p resolution, pushing clock speeds up to 2656 MHz. When tested at 4K Ultra HD, it managed 4411 points and 73 FPS. The database also shows that this card uses up to 180 watts of power.
The heart of the RTX 5060 Ti is the GB206 chip, which might come with either 36 or 40 SMs. If it has 36 SMs, you can expect 4,608 CUDA cores, 144 Tensor cores, 36 RT cores, 144 TMUs, and probably 64 ROPs. Memory-wise, this card connects through a 128-bit interface with super-fast GDDR7 memory - either 8 GB or 16 GB worth. Based on what these tests show, the card can boost past 2600 MHz, and its memory might run at 28 Gbps. That gives it a massive bandwidth of 448 GB/s. Since it needs 180 watts of power, some fancy versions of this card will need extra 8-pin power connectors that provide 150 watts, plus 75 more from the PCIe slot.
We should see this RTX 5060 Ti hit stores around mid-April. These early benchmark results help us understand how the card handles different screen resolutions and how much electricity it needs. The performance numbers look pretty impressive for a mid-range graphics card, especially with those high frame rates at 1080p. This card brings next-generation features at a price point more people can afford compared to the top-end models. For gamers who want ray tracing and AI features without spending a fortune, the 5060 Ti might be exactly what they need when it launches next month.
The heart of the RTX 5060 Ti is the GB206 chip, which might come with either 36 or 40 SMs. If it has 36 SMs, you can expect 4,608 CUDA cores, 144 Tensor cores, 36 RT cores, 144 TMUs, and probably 64 ROPs. Memory-wise, this card connects through a 128-bit interface with super-fast GDDR7 memory - either 8 GB or 16 GB worth. Based on what these tests show, the card can boost past 2600 MHz, and its memory might run at 28 Gbps. That gives it a massive bandwidth of 448 GB/s. Since it needs 180 watts of power, some fancy versions of this card will need extra 8-pin power connectors that provide 150 watts, plus 75 more from the PCIe slot.
We should see this RTX 5060 Ti hit stores around mid-April. These early benchmark results help us understand how the card handles different screen resolutions and how much electricity it needs. The performance numbers look pretty impressive for a mid-range graphics card, especially with those high frame rates at 1080p. This card brings next-generation features at a price point more people can afford compared to the top-end models. For gamers who want ray tracing and AI features without spending a fortune, the 5060 Ti might be exactly what they need when it launches next month.