Both the Asus Prime RTX 5060 Ti 16GB and the PNY RTX 5060 Ti OC Dual Fan 16GB share an identical foundation: the same 2407 MHz base clock, 4608 shading units, 144 TMUs, 48 ROPs, and 1750 MHz memory speed. This means they are drawing from the exact same GPU silicon and memory subsystem, and any performance delta between them comes down entirely to how aggressively each card is factory-overclocked.
That is where the PNY pulls ahead. Its GPU turbo of 2692 MHz versus the Asus Prime's 2572 MHz represents a 120 MHz boost clock advantage — roughly a 4.7% higher peak frequency. This directly flows through to every throughput metric: the PNY delivers 24.81 TFLOPS of floating-point performance against the Asus Prime's 23.7 TFLOPS, a 129.2 GPixel/s pixel rate versus 123.5 GPixel/s, and a texture rate of 387.6 GTexels/s compared to 370.4 GTexels/s. In practice, these differences translate to slightly higher sustained frame rates and better headroom in GPU-bound workloads, particularly at higher resolutions where fill rate and compute throughput are the primary bottlenecks.
The verdict for this group is clear: the PNY RTX 5060 Ti OC Dual Fan holds a consistent performance edge across every throughput metric, driven entirely by its higher factory overclock. Both cards support Double Precision Floating Point, so that is a non-differentiator. For users who want the most out-of-the-box performance from this GPU tier without manual overclocking, the PNY is the stronger choice based strictly on these specs.