The Gainward GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Phoenix runs at a base GPU clock of 2295 MHz, rising to 2452 MHz in turbo mode, while its 8960 shading units are backed by 280 texture mapping units and 96 render output units. These translate into a texture rate of 686.6 GTexels/s, a pixel rate of 235.4 GPixel/s, and 43.94 TFLOPS of floating-point performance. The GPU memory operates at 1750 MHz, and the card also supports Double Precision Floating Point (DPFP), broadening its suitability for compute-oriented workloads alongside gaming tasks.
The card is equipped with 16GB of GDDR7 VRAM running at an effective speed of 28000 MHz across a 256-bit memory bus, resulting in a maximum memory bandwidth of 896 GB/s. ECC memory support is also present, which adds a layer of data integrity protection useful in error-sensitive workloads.
The Gainward GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Phoenix supports DirectX 12 Ultimate, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 3, covering a broad range of graphics and compute APIs. Ray tracing and DLSS are both supported, while XeSS (XMX) is not present. The card handles up to four simultaneous displays and includes multi-display technology support, along with stereoscopic 3D capability. Intel Resizable BAR is supported, whereas LHR is not active on this model. RGB lighting is built in, rounding out the feature set on the physical side.
The card's output configuration consists of three DisplayPort connectors and one HDMI 2.1b port, totaling four video outputs. There are no DVI, mini DisplayPort, or USB-C ports present on this model.
The RTX 5070 Ti Phoenix is built on the Blackwell architecture, using a 5nm manufacturing process that integrates 45,600 million transistors into the die. It connects via PCIe 5.0 and carries a rated TDP of 300W, with cooling handled exclusively through an air-based solution — there is no air-water hybrid cooling on this model. The card measures 331.9 mm in width and 133.1 mm in height, giving a clear indication of its physical footprint inside a case.