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Topic: Gigabyte WF3 7950 (Read 11168 times)

newbie
Activity: 47
Merit: 0
November 07, 2013, 02:51:36 PM
#45
Then it should be 1,25V. You can use modded BIOS with VGPU=1,09V. You will get lower temps and lower consumption.
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1007
Live like there is no tomorrow!
November 06, 2013, 05:09:19 PM
#44
I haven't done anything with my card, I put it into my PC without overclocking anything. So honestly, I don't know. I guess default?
newbie
Activity: 47
Merit: 0
November 06, 2013, 01:20:17 PM
#43
Allright. Thanks for your message.

What do you mean with powertune? What command do you use for that? I haven't done anything with that I think.

My intensity is always max 18.

I haven't overclocked the GPU myself and it runs now on: GPU = 1000 MHZ and memoryclock (if that's the correct translation) = 1250 Mhz. I haven't done anything with the voltage by myself. Where can I find stats about this?


My GPU reaches the 81 degrees maximum often. It only hits the 82 or 83 when I'm heating the room my PC is located in. Hope this will keep my GPU from burning.

Do you use default or modded BIOS, because default BIOS is with VGPU 1,25V, and modded one is with VGPU 1,09V?
hero member
Activity: 1246
Merit: 501
November 04, 2013, 03:44:17 AM
#42
Allright, but doesn't there is a kind of relation between those two?


Not really, the heat sink on the VRM on these boards is pointlessly small.  I think that airflow over the back of the card is much more important than worrying about the GPU temp.

When I ran mine, I had little heat sinks stuck to the metal plate on the back, and a fast 120mm fan blowing down the back of the two cards.  Brought the VRM temps down significantly.
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1007
Live like there is no tomorrow!
November 03, 2013, 07:44:28 PM
#41
Allright. Thanks for your message.

What do you mean with powertune? What command do you use for that? I haven't done anything with that I think.

My intensity is always max 18.

I haven't overclocked the GPU myself and it runs now on: GPU = 1000 MHZ and memoryclock (if that's the correct translation) = 1250 Mhz. I haven't done anything with the voltage by myself. Where can I find stats about this?


My GPU reaches the 81 degrees maximum often. It only hits the 82 or 83 when I'm heating the room my PC is located in. Hope this will keep my GPU from burning.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 100
November 03, 2013, 07:20:23 PM
#40
Allright, but doesn't there is a kind of relation between those two?

I'm still wondering which --temp-overheat you guys use, because i set mine on 82. Which is just a randomly chosen number I feel confortable with, but I haven't based it on any research or logic.


82 is fine for the gpu.  But my vrm's have been blowing up when the gpu is running in the mid 70's.  I've got them running in the 60's right now for a couple weeks, and have been issue free.

The changes I've made to prevent this issue:  Reduced intensity from 20 to 18.  Reduced powertune from 20 to -13.  Reduced overclock from 1075 to 1050.  
With these changes, each card is running 10 to 15 degrees cooler, and the whole system (4 cards total) is running at 50 watts less.  It's also hurt my hashrate by about 40Kh/s per card.  But, I'm now getting much fewer rejects than before.
I've also added a heatsink on the back of the cards along the metal support for the vrm's.  Not sure how much difference that makes, but those heatsinks are getting hot, so that means they're doing some good.  I just don't know how much good.

intensity 18 was chosen because 19 had no affect at all.  18 decreased hashrate just slightly.
powertune -13 was chosen because that is the highest setting that made a difference to hashrate.  -12 and they still ran at the same speed as +20.  -13 was the first setting that actually did something.
So by using those settings, I know that they will improve power usage and temperature for the better.
gpu clock 1050 was chosen somewhat randomly.
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1007
Live like there is no tomorrow!
November 03, 2013, 06:45:32 PM
#39
Allright, but doesn't there is a kind of relation between those two?

I'm still wondering which --temp-overheat you guys use, because i set mine on 82. Which is just a randomly chosen number I feel confortable with, but I haven't based it on any research or logic.
full member
Activity: 231
Merit: 100
November 03, 2013, 06:43:00 PM
#38
I own the same one. What max temperature do you guys add in CGMiner? I mean the --temp-overheat command, which makes the fans go to 100% when they hit the chosen temperature.

As I have only 1 GPU, I really don't want to fire up.

--temp-overheat won't prevent this kind of failure. CGMiner monitors the GPU temperature, not the VRM temperature.
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1007
Live like there is no tomorrow!
November 03, 2013, 05:09:35 PM
#37
I own the same one. What max temperature do you guys add in CGMiner? I mean the --temp-overheat command, which makes the fans go to 100% when they hit the chosen temperature.

As I have only 1 GPU, I really don't want to fire up.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 100
October 13, 2013, 02:13:58 PM
#36
Make sure to tell them it died while playing Cysis 3 and that you never overclock  Grin.

They never asked.    Cool
full member
Activity: 174
Merit: 100
October 13, 2013, 01:56:19 PM
#35
Make sure to tell them it died while playing Cysis 3 and that you never overclock  Grin.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 100
October 13, 2013, 01:06:40 PM
#34
Thermaltake 850w, no powered riser on this one, there is only one more 7950 currenty in the mobo so power should be sufficent.
Thermaltake is a terrible, terrible brand.

+1
Buy a Seasonic.  Or a rebranded Seasonic.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 100
October 13, 2013, 01:05:32 PM
#33
This isn't true. My computer restarted itself.

There's always going to be exceptions I suppose.  Every mobo/power supply combo might behave differently.  But that does appear to be the exception.

I even have my bios set to always turn back on after a power outage.  And that works, it turns itself back on if I unplug and re-plug the power supply.  But when this failure happens, it turns off and stays off until manually switched on.
full member
Activity: 231
Merit: 100
October 13, 2013, 12:43:41 PM
#32
The pop doesn't happen until someone physically turns the machine back on after the actual failure.  So there's no risk of causing a fire while nobody is around.

This isn't true. My computer restarted itself.
sr. member
Activity: 840
Merit: 255
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October 12, 2013, 08:53:07 PM
#31
Thermaltake 850w, no powered riser on this one, there is only one more 7950 currenty in the mobo so power should be sufficent.
Thermaltake is a terrible, terrible brand.
sr. member
Activity: 840
Merit: 255
SportsIcon - Connect With Your Sports Heroes
October 12, 2013, 08:51:31 PM
#30
My advice is to not run these cards above 1000 mV
This is a damn fine advice. I'm running my cards at 950
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
October 09, 2013, 08:37:41 PM
#29
Yo, ive had 8 go. Here is a video of one i made earlier

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PG2ZRT1mRWE
Haha nice one that you got it on tape Cheesy Looks like you jumped, so did i when it happened to mine Cheesy

Did you just tape by luck or you actually know it? !!!!
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
October 09, 2013, 05:18:54 PM
#28
Yo, ive had 8 go. Here is a video of one i made earlier

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PG2ZRT1mRWE
Haha nice one that you got it on tape Cheesy Looks like you jumped, so did i when it happened to mine Cheesy

Lol, yeah, I jump every time.  Even when I know it's going to happen. 

So you expected this? I thought you was just recording randomly Cheesy
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
October 09, 2013, 05:15:51 PM
#27
That sucks, imagine what would happen if its mining and no one is around.

It's not a problem.  The failure happens the exact same way every time.  It goes like this:

1. Rig is mining its own business, working along nicely
2. Rig completely shuts down for no apparent reason
3. Owner sees the rig is off and goes to check it out
4. Inspect the rig, everything looks fine, confused as to why it shut off
5. Thinking everything is OK, switches the rig back on
6. BANG! 

The pop doesn't happen until someone physically turns the machine back on after the actual failure.  So there's no risk of causing a fire while nobody is around.

This is the exact way it happened to me Smiley
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
October 09, 2013, 04:47:54 PM
#26
The pop doesn't happen until someone physically turns the machine back on after the actual failure.  So there's no risk of causing a fire while nobody is around.

Most of the pops really happen when the machine is getting powered on, but it's not always the case. I had one card under frequent monitoring because of the 2 already failed capacitors, when I noticed the sudden stop of fan noise followed by the strong burnt smell. Third pop... it was time to kill it, because I didn't plan to get one more barely alive card back from the shitty RMA process. Powering the computer on caused the fourth capacitor to pop so hard that a GLOWING chunk flew at least 10 cm before landing on a wooden furniture (ouch).
Don't underestimate gigabyte, next time we may hear about one of their products just catching fire. It's time for them to get rid of the only temperature sensor to shave off even some more cents per card.
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