Asus introduced the GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super Prime video card as part of Nvidia’s SFF-Ready Enthusiast GeForce Card initiative, which offers powerful gaming systems in compact computer cases. The new product will be available in versions both with and without factory GPU overclocking.
A notable feature of the Asus card is that it uses an Nvidia AD102 GPU, instead of the usual AD103 found in the original RTX 4070 Ti Super. Asus itself does not talk about this, but this fact is easy to verify if you look at the back of the video card. Its capacitor layout corresponds to the AD102 GPU, and not the AD103, which is used in the original model.
Let us remind you that AD102 is used in the GeForce RTX 4080 Ti, GeForce RTX 4090 and some other older video cards. The GPU specs remain the same – it offers 8448 CUDA cores, just like the AD103 chip in the original RTX 4070 Ti Super.
The dimensions of the GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super Prime are 300 × 120 × 50 mm. The card occupies 2.5 expansion slots in the PC case. For additional power supply, the accelerator is equipped with one 12+4-pin 12VHPWR connector.
As mentioned above, the card will be released both with the reference GPU frequency declared by Nvidia (2160 MHz) and with a small factory overclock to 2625 MHz. As usual, Asus also offers manual overclocking settings for both versions of the card through its proprietary GPU Tweak 3 application, thereby increasing the gaming frequency of the graphics chip to 2640 MHz and 2655 MHz, respectively.
The cost of the Asus GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super Prime has not yet been announced. The new product has not yet appeared on sale either.