A few weeks ago, I tested the classic black version of the Asus Prime GeForce RTX 5070. It stood out for its combination of very good thermals and acoustics and an attractive price. However, one of the fans was lower quality, making the card noisier than it should have been. I decided to retest it with the white version. The good news is that the fan issue didn’t recur. As for overall noise levels, though, there’s still not much improvement.
Clocks, Temperatures & Fan Speeds—F1 24, 3840 × 2160 (Q mode)
The following graphs show monitoring data from the F1 24 benchmark at 3840 × 2160 resolution with Ultra settings. The test takes place on the Singapore circuit in wet conditions. Unlike other benchmarks, which involve several loops with brief cooling intervals during loading, this is a continuous game load over a five-lap race lasting over ten minutes. The recorded values in the graphs are from the final lap, when the card is fully warmed up.
Average frame rate was 57 fps, only 0.3 fps lower.
The average GPU clock dropped by 27 MHz to 2706 MHz, with a low of 2685 MHz and a high of 2745 MHz.
Power consumption again stuck to the 250 W limit.
Maximum GPU temperature hit 75.9 °C, while memory temperatures mostly fluctuated between 72 and 74 °C.
Maximum fan speed hovered around 1450 RPM—compared to just 1286 RPM in the black variant.
And again, GPU Boost is voltage-limited.
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