TECH NEWS – Nvidia is running out of things to do when it announces its next-generation graphics cards at CES.
Kopite7kimi, a trusted insider, has posted on Twitter what the specs of the two mid-range graphics cards (because if there won’t be a desktop RTX 5050, the RTX 5060 will be the entry level…) will be. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti comes with the GB203-300 A1 GPU on the PG147-SKU60 board. It will have 8960 CUDA cores, 16 GB, 256-bit GDDR7 VRAM, and its power consumption (TBP) will be 300W. We’ve heard this from here and there, and it seems that the “greens” are still not trying to lower the power consumption, because they could possibly push themselves harder. So far we have heard of 350W consumption, but some tuned models may keep it. Compared to the 285W consumption of the RTX 4070 Ti/RTX 4070 Ti Super pair, at least it’s not too much of an increase.
Merry Christmas.
GeForce RTX 5070 Ti
PG147-SKU60
GB203-300-A1
8960FP32
256-bit GDDR7 16G
300W— kopite7kimi (@kopite7kimi) December 25, 2024
Let’s take a look at the specifications of the GeForce RTX 5070, which is equipped with the GB205-300-A1 GPU on the PG146-SKU70 board. This will have 6144 CUDA cores paired with 12GB of 192-bit GDDR7 VRAM and a TBP of 250W. VRAM and bandwidth are the same as the RTX 4070, although Nvidia has switched to GDDR7. The number of CUDA cores has been reduced from the previous version, as there will be 6144 instead of 6400 cores on this graphics card. Power consumption is unchanged from previous leaks.
GeForce RTX 5070
PG146/147-SKU70
GB205-300-A1
6144FP32
192-bit GDDR7 12G
250W— kopite7kimi (@kopite7kimi) December 25, 2024
Kopite7kimi is considered to be very reliable, so these are likely to be the final specifications. We don’t know the price yet, but based on what we know so far, we know the release order (we’ve already reported on this). The RTX 5070 and RTX 5070 Ti will only debut after the two more powerful models, sometime during the first quarter (so sometime between January and March). One thing we can guess about the pricing is that Nvidia simply won’t be willing to lower it. Where’s the end of 2007, when they released the most powerful price/performance graphics card ever (8800 GT)?
None of this is official yet!
Source: WCCFTech
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