![]() ![]() The new Tri Frozr 2 heatsink uses three Torx Fan 4.0 fans. Even though it’s no longer top dog, the Gaming X Trio is still a well-built and sleek-looking GPU. ![]() The Ventus cards start the product stack with the Gaming line above it and the Suprim X on top of both. They added to their existing lineup which now consists of the Suprim X, the Gaming X Trio/Gaming Trio, and Ventus/Ventus 3X. This allows for 375 W of total power available which is more than ample for this 200 W TDP card.Īs mentioned above, the MSI RTX 3060 Ti Gaming X Trio would have been MSI’s top trim offering until the release of Ampere. ![]() The RTX 3060 Ti doesn’t need all the power that the RTX 3090 does but this sample from MSI uses 2 x 8-pin PCIe connectors. We also have 8 GB of Samsung GDDR6 on a 256-bit bus which yields 448 GB/s bandwidth. This new GPU consists of 4864 CUDA cores, just under half of what is found in the RTX 3090. The RTX 3060 Ti is a cut-down version of Ampere using the GA104-200-A1 die. Let’s dive in and see how our first RTX 3060 Ti measures up! Specifications and Features Nvidia RTX 3000 Series Specifications The Gaming X GPU series still features the new Tri Frozr 2 thermal design, a custom PCB with a graphene backplate, RGB LEDs, and a robust power delivery system. The Gaming X lineup has dropped a notch this year and given up the top spot to the Suprim X line of cards from MSI and is a tier above the Ventus line. ![]() This is the first Ampere-based GPU with more of a mainstream price: $399 for reference models and a $469.99 MSRP for the Gaming X Trio we are testing today. Today we’ll take an in-depth look at MSI’s RTX 3060 Ti Gaming X Trio. ![]()
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