Custom MSI RTX 5060 Ti models surface with 16-pin power connectors and PCIe 5.0 x8

16-pin power connector
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Nvidia is preparing to launch the GeForce RTX 5060 Ti to compete with AMD and the best graphics cards on the market. Meanwhile, VideoCardz has leaked various custom models from MSI, displaying the use of a 16-pin (12VHPWR) power connector.

The GeForce RTX 5060 Ti is a forthcoming midrange gaming GPU from Nvidia, expected to have a 180W TDP. A single 8-pin PCIe power connector, capable of providing up to 150W, is more than adequate for the GeForce RTX 5060 Ti since it can draw an additional 75W from the PCIe slot, resulting in a combined total of 225W. It's impossible to tell from the leaked renders if MSI utilizes the original 12VHPWR or the revised 12V-2x6 connector, but it should be the latter.

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Graphics Card

Power Connector

Cooling Solution

Display Outputs

GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Gaming Trio

16-pin

Triple Fans

3 x DisplayPort 1.2b, 1 x HDMI 2.1b

GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Gaming Trio White

16-pin

Triple Fans

3 x DisplayPort 1.2b, 1 x HDMI 2.1b

GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Gaming

16-pin

Dual Fans

3 x DisplayPort 1.2b, 1 x HDMI 2.1b

GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Inspire 2X

8-pin

Dual Fans

3 x DisplayPort 1.2b, 1 x HDMI 2.1b

Zhiye Liu
News Editor and Memory Reviewer

Zhiye Liu is a news editor and memory reviewer at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.

  • Notton
    For MSI, their 2-slot cards should be the VENTUS series, which they had for the 4070Ti Super.

    But IDK how or why they manage to make these cards so huge when it uses less power than the above mentioned.
    Reply
  • King_V
    Why? Seriously, just, why? 180W card? Let's say it even hits 200W continuously.

    A single 8-pin at 150W, PCIe at 75W, combined that gives you a 12.5% margin remaining. Why keep pushing this 16-pin connector?

    Is it for the reasons that someone suggested in another thread, that MSI is going Nvidia-only, and, therefore has incentive to help them make the 16-pin a de-facto standard?
    Reply
  • TheyStoppedit
    Why a 2x6 connector on a 180W card? Because at least that connector can pull 180W safely. Multi-flame generation requires at least 350W to work in most cases.
    Reply
  • Roland Of Gilead
    TheyStoppedit said:
    Multi-flame generation
    NIce! ;)
    Reply
  • Notton
    King_V said:
    Why? Seriously, just, why? 180W card? Let's say it even hits 200W continuously.

    A single 8-pin at 150W, PCIe at 75W, combined that gives you a 12.5% margin remaining. Why keep pushing this 16-pin connector?

    Is it for the reasons that someone suggested in another thread, that MSI is going Nvidia-only, and, therefore has incentive to help them make the 16-pin a de-facto standard?
    Yeah, it's because Nvidia has total control over what can and cannot be used and the 16-pin is mandated and strictly enforced.
    Reply
  • FunSurfer
    The RTX 5060 Ti is best for older PCs, upgrading from GTX 1070 or RTX 2060, as it will bottleneck any modern CPU in gaming. And what older PCs have? PCIe 3.0 or 4.0 interface and PSUs with only 8-pin power connectors, so the x8 connection on slower interface and 16-pin power connector will fit right in...
    Reply
  • thestryker
    PCB reuse is typically the reason for 16-pin connectors appearing on lower SKUs so that's not particularly a surprise.

    I'm sure this card will be fine on PCIe 4.0, but I'm really curious about PCIe 3.0 performance. Going from 4.0 to 3.0 was enough to make the 4060 Ti about the same as the 3060 Ti.
    Reply
  • Amdlova
    For me 16pin is a big no :)
    180W = no

    Got one zotac 4060 with 13% over power limit will be my card for a long long time
    Reply
  • HardwiredWireless
    I think it's amazing that the 5060 TI is going to be able to compete with the 5090 which is the best graphics card on the market.
    Reply
  • HardwiredWireless
    King_V said:
    Why? Seriously, just, why? 180W card? Let's say it even hits 200W continuously.

    A single 8-pin at 150W, PCIe at 75W, combined that gives you a 12.5% margin remaining. Why keep pushing this 16-pin connector?

    Is it for the reasons that someone suggested in another thread, that MSI is going Nvidia-only, and, therefore has incentive to help them make the 16-pin a de-facto standard.

    King_V said:
    Why? Seriously, just, why? 180W card? Let's say it even hits 200W continuously.

    A single 8-pin at 150W, PCIe at 75W, combined that gives you a 12.5% margin remaining. Why keep pushing this 16-pin connector?

    Is it for the reasons that someone suggested in another thread, that MSI is going Nvidia-only, and, therefore has incentive to help them make the 16-pin a de-facto standard?
    Using the 16-pin connector will also help when it comes time to replace the card in the future.
    Reply