- Chipset: GeForce RTX 4060 Ti
- Videogeheugen: 8 GB GDDR6
- Geheugeninterface: 128-bits
- Uitgang: DisplayPort x 3 (v1.4a) / HDMI 2.1 x 1
- Digitale maximale resolutie: 7680 x 4320
MSI Gaming GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 8 GB GDRR6 128-bit HDMI/DP Nvlink TORX Fan 4.0 Ada Lovelace Architectuur Videokaart (RTX 4060 Ti Ventus 2X Zwart 8G OC)
€ 535,98
Last updated on 17 August 2025 08:48
Merk | MSI |
---|---|
Serie | VENTUS 2X |
Productafmetingen | 19,81 x 11,94 x 0,25 cm, 771,11 g |
Modelnummer item | RTX 4060 Ti VENTUS 2X BLACK 8G OC |
Kleur | Informatie niet beschikbaar |
Resolutie | 7680×4320 |
Kloksnelheid geheugen | 19000 MHz |
Coprocessor graphics | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti |
Merk grafische chipset | NVIDIA |
Beschrijving grafische kaart | De MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ti beschikt over de GeForce RTX 4060 Ti-chipset met 8 GB GDDR6-videogeheugen en een 128-bits geheugeninterface. Het ondersteunt DisplayPort x 3 (v1.4a) en HDMI 2.1 uitgangen, met een digitale maximale resolutie van 7680 x 4320. Het is ontworpen voor gaming en creatieve taken met functies zoals Ada Lovelace-architectuur, snelle ray tracing, AI-versnelde prestaties met DLSS 3 en meer. |
Type video-RAM | GDDR6 |
RAM-grootte grafische kaart | 8 GB |
Interface grafische kaart | PCI Express |
Wattage | 550 watt |
Batterijen wel of niet meegeleverd | Nee |
Fabrikant | MSI |
Gegarandeerde software-updates tot | onbekend |
Klantenrecensies | 4,6 4,6 van 5 sterren 399 beoordelingen 4,6 van 5 sterren |
Datum eerste beschikbaarheid | 24 mei 2023 |
Jose A. –
Excelente producto 👌🏻 todo bien, juego todos los juegos a buenos FPS
Geraldius –
One of the things consistently overlooked in most ‘gamer’ reviews of this card is its low power consumption for the performance it delivers. This card is often compared against the older 3060Ti, against which it competes pretty well all around, but the price of this one is a few dollars more. What they never mention is that this card runs about 100watts lower in power consumption. This means you don’t need a big power supply and less cooling is needed.
Not everyone buys a graphics card with maximum gaming speed as the sole criteria. In my case I needed to update a 10-year old machine that was running a GTX 660Ti – yes that old. I don’t do much PC gaming but I do run a lot of creator related apps, like Autodesk Fusion 360, and Davinci Resolve. I needed to upgrade in order to run current CAD and video editing software reliably. The 4060Ti only needs a single PCIE power connector and its power consumption was no higher than my old card. This old PC also is running an i7-3770K, which is power hungry compared to current processors, and I was wary about adding to the PS load further. So the 4060Ti let me update graphics performance by an order of magnitude without needing to spend money on a bigger power supply or raise my electricity bill.
The performance boost was very good. The PCMARK 10 benchmark of this computer was raised from 3286 with the old 660Ti to 4005 by just changing to the 4060Ti. Not stellar, but enough to keep this 10-year old computer faster than 25% of the currently benchmarked machines out there. Graphics scores were almost 10X faster, but an old SATA HDD is still holding the machine back. And now my problems with creativity software performance have been eliminated.
lilestj –
Pricing aside (I was waiting almost a year for the price to go down to buy another!), this GPU worked great for our use case. It is highly power efficient and we were able to play all of the GPU-necessary games (Jedi Survivor, Star Wars Squadrons, etc) that we were itching to play but couldn’t without a GPU. We only have a 1080p monitor, so not looking at 1440p or 4k, and didn’t encounter any issues with quality settings. We did get some game-crashing every so often, but I attributed it to software bugs, which I read about in blogs, which doesn’t seem specific to our hardware.
Our special situation and why this GPU perfectly fit the bill is that we were putting it into a re-purposed (ie received it for minimal price) HP SFF i8700 computer. These have a proprietary PSU that is about 250W, not something you’d think you could stuff a GPU into. With 2 additional purchases from Amazon, a 600mm PCIe riser cable (I pulled the cable out through the CD slot, which I removed, and then plugged the GPU in external to the box, since these SFF cases (yes, I also have a fractal case that mounts full-height sideways, but not this HP) are not designed for modern full-height slot GPUs (unless you spend a fortune on a limited availability last-gen model that fits the half-height slot), AND a power adapter that converts SATA power to 8-pin GPU power. To be clear, the only things plugged into the computer were the bare bones (RAM, 1 M.2 SSD, GPU, monitor, KB (though with LEDs!), mouse, game controller), no spinning drives. This is the situation that should not have worked, but worked beautifully. Power efficiency of this GPU was key.
Bob –
Gave me a faulty gpu
V –
Rien a redire, c’est bien !