Nvidia introduces $399 RTX 4060 Ti and $299 4060 without introducing a price hike.
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Further Reading
Nvidia is beginning to roll out its new Ada Lovelace GPU architecture to sub-$500 graphics cards, the models that the vast majority of PC gamers buy and use. There's good news and bad news.
The good news is that the GeForce RTX 4060 Ti will launch on May 24 for $399, the same price that the RTX 3060 Ti launched for in December 2020--it's the first GPU launch in ages not to come with a price hike built in. Like other RTX 4000-series GPUs, it supports DLSS 3's AI-assisted frame rate-boosting technologies and AV1 video encoding support, and it's much more power-efficient than its predecessors. The bad news is that the 4060 Ti is an unusually mild upgrade over the 3060 Ti, with the same 8GB bank of RAM and (according to Nvidia) just 15 percent faster performance than the 3060 Ti in games without the DLSS Frame Generation feature enabled.
Nvidia will sell a Founders Edition version of the 4060 Ti that looks about the same size as its Founders Edition RTX 4070; it also uses the new 12VHPWR connector, though cards from Nvidia's partners will often opt to use a traditional 8-pin power connector instead.
Nvidia will fill out the 4060 lineup later in July; a $499 4060 Ti with 16GB of memory will sit in between the 8GB model and the $599 RTX 4070. A lower-end non-Ti RTX 4060 will also launch for $299, a small drop from the 3060's $329 introductory price for what Nvidia says should be 20 percent better performance; not a bad deal for the first generation-over-generation price drop we've seen from Nvidia in years. The 8GB 4060 Ti and 4060 are both pitched as 1080p cards, partly because 8GB of graphics memory is becoming a bottleneck in newer games at higher resolutions.
Meet AD106
The entire 4060 series is based on the AD106 GPU die, the fourth and smallest (so far) of the chips Nvidia has shipped in the RTX 4000 series after the AD102 (4090), AD103 (4080), and AD104 (4070 series). The AD106 die is also used in the laptop versions of the RTX 4070.
A fully enabled AD106 die includes 4,608 of Nvidia's CUDA cores on a 128-bit memory interface, but both 4060-series GPUs use a partially disabled version (see the table above for details). As rumored, the 4060 Ti's specs are a bit underwhelming when compared directly to the 3060 Ti, which had more CUDA cores and a 256-bit bus, which contributes to its smaller-than-typical improvement over the last-gen card. The other RTX 4000-series GPUs have typically included as many or more CUDA cores than their RTX 3000-series counterparts, though narrower memory bus widths have been the norm for every GPU other than the 4090.
To close that gap, the 4060 Ti benefits from Ada's architectural improvements, plus significantly higher clock speeds. Nvidia has also added extra L2 cache to save on the number of times the GPU needs to go out to main memory, reducing the impact of the narrower memory bus (the 4060 Ti has 32MB of L2 cache, and the 4060 has 24MB, compared to 4MB and 3MB for the 3060 Ti and 3060).
Nvidia's press briefing and slide deck avoided comparing most of these specs directly, opting instead to do generation-over-generation spec comparisons using TFLOP numbers. Clearly, the intent is to drive home that the 4060 Ti is a faster card than the 3060 Ti despite these specs, because people who follow GPU news online are incapable of being chill when they perceive that a product has been named wrong or positioned wrong or priced wrong (expect a fair amount of outrage about this to be expressed via YouTube thumbnails).
One of the things that impressed us most about the RTX 4070 was its power efficiency, and both RTX 4060 GPUs look pretty good on that front, too. The 4060 Ti comes with a TGP of 160 W, compared to 200 W for the 3060 Ti, while the 4060 only needs 115 W instead of 170 W. That's awfully close to the 75 W of power that a PCI Express slot can provide without an external power connector--a hypothetical RTX 4050 could hit that number, which could bode well for people trying to put a GPU into an underpowered budget desktop tower from Dell or HP with no 8-pin power connectors to spare.