Packaging
The Card
The ASUS TUF color theme for GeForce RTX 50 Series is very similar to what we saw on the GeForce 40 Series. Metal surfaces are combined with various shades of gray and black. Both the main cooler and backplate are made of metal.
Dimensions of the card are 33.0 x 14.0 cm, and it weighs 1616 g.
Installation requires three slots in your system. There is enough space to plug something in the fourth slot—I tested it. We measured the card's width to be 63 mm.
Display connectivity includes three standard DisplayPort 2.1b and two HDMI 2.1b.
Standard for all GeForce RTX 50-series Blackwell cards is a new display engine that supports three DisplayPort 2.1b outputs, each capable of UHBR20; and one HDMI 2.1a. Both interfaces support DSC (display stream compression). With DSC enabled, a single DisplayPort on this card can drive 4K 12-bit HDR at 480 Hz; or 8K 12-bit HDR at up to 165 Hz. The RTX 5070 Ti features an updated media acceleration engine with support for 4:2:2 video formats, AV1 UHQ, and MV-HEVC. There are two independent NVENC and NVDEC units.
The card uses a single 16-pin connector, which allows a maximum power draw of 600 W, but the board power limit is set much lower of course.
Here we can also see the dual BIOS switch, which lets you toggle between the default Performance BIOS and a Quiet BIOS, which runs the fans at lower speed.
ASUS has installed an RGB lighting zone near the corner of the card.
Teardown
The fan assembly can be removed easily, which makes it easy to replace a broken fan in a couple of years—no need to touch the thermal paste of the card.
ASUS has installed seven heatpipes on their thermal solution, the main heatsink also provides cooling for the memory chips and VRM circuitry.
The backplate protects the card against damage during installation and handling. Note the lines pattern, it's not embossed but printed—great idea.