NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4060 Test Scores Reportedly Leaked Online

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Image: NVIDIA

The RTX 40 series rumor mill never sleeps and this time around it has reportedly given us TimeSpy test scores for the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4060. The x60, and x70, cards tend to be NVIDIA’s bread and butter when it comes to its bulk of sales in the gaming market so there are sure to be plenty of folks keeping an eye out for this segment of the Ada Lovelace GPUs.

It has already been stated that the following scores are for internal test boards. Per final approval, it is expected there will be changes to their design. This NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti appears to surpass the NVIDIA GeForce 3080 but also has an appetite for power. Clocking in at around 2600 MHz it scored 8600 while using upwards of 280 Watts. It is believed this card will feature 10 GB of GDDR6 17.5 Gbps memory and an ADA104-180 GPU. If true this means the card could have mixed performance comparisons to the aforementioned NVIDIA GeForce 3080 which has a 12 GB GDDR6X version.

The non-TI NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 had impressive results as well. It scored around 6000 with an average clock speed of 2700 MHz. It consumed upwards of 240 Watts, matching previous rumors, and is said to feature a different GPU, the ADA106-300. As a lower mid-range GPU, it is expected to feature 8 GB of GDDR6 memory clocked at 17.0 Gbps on a 128-bit bus.

Multiple SKUs possible

NVIDIA is known to offer multiple flavors in its lower and mid-range card tiers. That being said, it’s entirely possible there will be multiple SKUs for each with different configurations. Since the days of Maxwell, NVIDIA has released different versions of its x50, x60, and x70 cards with varying memory sizes so even though both of these cards could have less VRAM than predecessors it doesn’t mean that there won’t be another version that matches or exceeds them. These cards are expected to launch towards the end of 2022 and Q1 2023.

Source: VideoCardz

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Peter Brosdahl
As a child of the 70’s I was part of the many who became enthralled by the video arcade invasion of the 1980’s. Saving money from various odd jobs I purchased my first computer from a friend of my dad, a used Atari 400, around 1982. Eventually it would end up being a lifelong passion of upgrading and modifying equipment that, of course, led into a career in IT support.

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