Both the PNY RTX 5070 Ti OC Triple Fan and the Zotac RTX 5070 Ti Solid Core are built on the same fundamental GPU silicon, sharing identical base clocks of 2295 MHz, the same 8960 shading units, 280 TMUs, 96 ROPs, and a memory speed of 1750 MHz. This means their theoretical architectural ceiling and memory bandwidth are equivalent — any performance gap between them comes down entirely to how aggressively each card boosts under load.
That is where the PNY pulls clearly ahead. Its GPU turbo reaches 2572 MHz versus the Zotac's 2452 MHz — a 120 MHz advantage that compounds across every derived metric. The PNY's floating-point throughput of 46.09 TFLOPS versus 43.94 TFLOPS on the Zotac represents roughly a 5% gap in raw compute, which in practice translates to consistently higher sustained frame rates in GPU-bound scenarios, particularly at 4K or in ray-traced workloads where compute saturation is most likely. Similarly, its texture fill rate of 720.2 GTexels/s versus 686.6 GTexels/s means slightly faster texture processing in complex scenes.
The verdict for this group is clear: the PNY RTX 5070 Ti OC Triple Fan holds a measurable performance edge, driven entirely by its higher factory boost clock. The Zotac Solid Core is not a slow card by any measure, but it operates closer to reference boost speeds. If maximizing out-of-the-box GPU performance is the priority and no manual overclocking is intended, the PNY is the stronger choice based strictly on these specs.