The world of custom RTX 4060 graphics cards is a strange one for sure. From adorable, single-fan Mini-ITX GPUs, to unnecessary three-fan models, there's a 4060 for everyone it seems. And with the RTX 4060 Ti 16GB having launched today to little enthusiasm, I thought it was a good time to go over just how experimental and strange some of the third-party designs for Nvidia's recently released RTX 4060 are, and why this card in particular affords such wild design variations.
Add-in boards like Lenovo's Mini-ITX GeForce RTX 4060, currently limited to the company's own prebuilt PCs, could one day hit retailers and give mini-PC enthusiasts all the benefits of a 40-series card in a small form factor. We're also seeing somewhat unnecessary experimentation, such as that of Gigabyte's triple fan model. If nothing else, it can at least make your entry-level GPU look more impressive than it actually is. More importantly, its one of the first low-profile RTX 4060 cards we've seen.
Then we have Palit and its RTX 4060 with a physical x8 PCIe connector… because why the heck not? While most recent cards have used the standard PCIe x16 to hook up to the motherboard, that hasn't been necessary for the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 and RTX 4060 Ti. A card like this will function perfectly in any x8 slot, and can open up some flexibility options when it comes to component configuration.
So why are we seeing so much more variation in RTX 4060 AIB designs than other, higher-powered graphics cards?
Built around TSMC's 4nm process, the AD107 GPU at the heart of the RTX 4060 is the fifth chip in the Ada lineup. It's an 8GB card with just 24 streaming multiprocessors, and 3072 CUDA cores—a spec that sees it somewhat lacking in the face of its
Read more on pcgamer.com