Leaks about NVIDIA's RTX 5060 Ti and RTX 5060 graphics cards flooded the internet during early March. Many tech fans expected NVIDIA to reveal these lower-end Blackwell gaming GPUs before their GTC 2025 event. Early spec sheets appeared earlier this month, but they missed several important technical details. Reports from yesterday suggest NVIDIA changed its original launch timeline for these cards.
According to leaked roadmaps, the RTX 5060 Ti might hit stores by mid-April 2025, followed by the standard RTX 5060 around mid-May. Despite these apparent delays, tech site VideoCardz keeps digging for information. Their latest report claims NVIDIA already sent complete RTX 5060 Ti specifications to their manufacturing partners.
The leaked details confirm two versions of the card - one with 16 GB memory and another with 8 GB. Both run on a 128-bit memory bus and use the identical GB206-300-A1 GPU containing 4608 CUDA cores. VideoCardz learned both models will feature 28 Gbps memory, resulting in 448 GB/s bandwidth - a 55% improvement over the previous generation.
NVIDIA set the base clock at 2407 MHz and the boost clock at 2572 MHz for these models. The base speed runs 97 MHz faster than the RTX 4060 Ti, with the boost coming in 37 MHz higher. Some board partners plan to build custom designs using 8-pin power connectors, which should handle the reported 180W power rating. Most RTX 5060 Ti cards will probably use 16-pin connectors instead. Unfortunately, VideoCardz couldn't find any final pricing information during their investigation.
According to leaked roadmaps, the RTX 5060 Ti might hit stores by mid-April 2025, followed by the standard RTX 5060 around mid-May. Despite these apparent delays, tech site VideoCardz keeps digging for information. Their latest report claims NVIDIA already sent complete RTX 5060 Ti specifications to their manufacturing partners.
The leaked details confirm two versions of the card - one with 16 GB memory and another with 8 GB. Both run on a 128-bit memory bus and use the identical GB206-300-A1 GPU containing 4608 CUDA cores. VideoCardz learned both models will feature 28 Gbps memory, resulting in 448 GB/s bandwidth - a 55% improvement over the previous generation.
NVIDIA set the base clock at 2407 MHz and the boost clock at 2572 MHz for these models. The base speed runs 97 MHz faster than the RTX 4060 Ti, with the boost coming in 37 MHz higher. Some board partners plan to build custom designs using 8-pin power connectors, which should handle the reported 180W power rating. Most RTX 5060 Ti cards will probably use 16-pin connectors instead. Unfortunately, VideoCardz couldn't find any final pricing information during their investigation.