At first glance, the clock speeds of these two GPUs appear surprisingly close — the RTX 5070 Ti runs a slightly higher base clock at 2300 MHz, while the 5060 Infinity 3 OC edges ahead on turbo at 2580 MHz versus 2450 MHz. However, raw clock speed is only one part of the performance equation, and it becomes almost irrelevant once you look at the sheer difference in GPU hardware resources underneath.
The RTX 5070 Ti carries more than double the shading units (8960 vs 3840), double the ROPs (96 vs 48), and more than double the TMUs (280 vs 120). These multipliers translate directly into the workload metrics that matter: the 5070 Ti delivers 43.94 TFLOPS of floating-point performance compared to 19.81 TFLOPS on the 5060 — a roughly 2.2× advantage — while its texture rate of 686.6 GTexels/s versus 309.6 GTexels/s means it can push far more complex scene geometry and effects per frame. The pixel fill rate gap (235.2 vs 123.8 GPixel/s) is equally significant, directly affecting how fast each card can resolve high-resolution output, especially at 4K. Both cards share identical memory speeds at 1750 MHz and both support Double Precision Floating Point, so neither has an edge there.
The 5060 Infinity 3 OC's higher boost clock is a sign of Palit's factory overclock doing its job, but it cannot compensate for having roughly half the execution resources of the 5070 Ti. The RTX 5070 Ti holds a clear and substantial performance advantage across every meaningful throughput metric in this group — it is the stronger choice for demanding workloads, high-resolution gaming, or any scenario where raw GPU compute matters.