- Jan 31, 2017
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As long as it is powered by a 6-pin connector it should be alright. If you're from India, then Zotac is usually the best in terms of warranty and price.
Alright. Thank you for the help.
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As long as it is powered by a 6-pin connector it should be alright. If you're from India, then Zotac is usually the best in terms of warranty and price.
Zotac is good. It is very popular in India, you can say that it's as popular as EVGA is in the US.Alright. Thank you for the help.But, I don't know why other users also face the same issue like I'm am. What about the quality of the ZOTAC cards and cooling?
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Zotac is good. It is very popular in India, you can say that it's as popular as EVGA is in the US.
I'm not sure about the problem you're having with the RX 480, but I'm inclined to believe its related to power delivery.
As a last ditch effort before blaming the graphics card, run something like Prime95 to re-test the CPU/RAM isolated from the GPU and make sure those aren't the culprits. I'd hate to have you get a new card, only to have the same issue again.
Have you tried pulling the GPU and running on the onboard graphics? While not an ideal test, it would really only help you rule out memory. I doubt power draw would be anywhere near as high.
Also a 600w+ PSU is plenty enough for either RX480 or GTX1060, I think what is being questioned is the quality of the particular unit you received. Once you start building and you stick with it, I think naturally you'll have an extra PSU or 2 for testing this particular problem. It can happen, but generally is more frequent with no-brand names or "budget lines" from brand names.
PSU is a possible cause. Based on this I would start with a replacement GPU. It's hard to know for certain without either a spare known working video card or a spare known working PSU. So, you have to take your pick and go with it.I have tried everything pal. No problems while using iGPU. Nope, I don't have any extra PSU to test out. Currently, I am using my PC without GPU. I re-installed Windows 10 and is acting weird right now. No apps installed just installed the Drivers. Is PSU a cause?
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PSU is a possible cause. Based on this I would start with a replacement GPU. It's hard to know for certain without either a spare known working video card or a spare known working PSU. So, you have to take your pick and go with it.
Pal! Just now, got some BSOD error! Indicating 'BAD_SYSTEM_CONFIG' after reboot. I'm feeling really bad. It's my new PC! Been on my PC since morning figuring out the problems.
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As a last-ditch effort, before you replace the card, you can try this - if the card came with a dual 6-pin to 8-pin adapter, and I think the ASUS STRIX does, could you try to see if connecting both the PCI-e connectors from your PSU to the card helps in any way?
I think the RX 480 is a faulty card which requires more Driver Development efforts.
Lol
My specific data point: I have a PowerColor Radeon RX 480 4 GB Red Dragon with power supply Rosewill Valens-500 grinding energy-intensive RC5 well: http://moowrap.net/show_host_detail.php?hostid=732334 and its tasks.
Anyway, if you insist on ZOTAC GeForce GTX 1060, I suggest the AMP! Edition with 2 fans to maintain high Nvidia GPU Boost frequency.
So, you are saying, you have not experienced any crash even with 500W PSU. Am I right?![]()
With 500 W, or 650 W in your case, the amount of power is not an issue.
So is it a faulty GPU I have got?But why the amount of power doesn't matter?
That is nonsense, don't listen to him! The PSU can deliver up to 50A or 600W on that V12 rail. Its 99.9% your GPU. You've gotten a faulty one, it happens quite often actually. Just RMA it.So, GTX 1060 can be handled by my PSU? I am thinking to buy a ZOTAC GTX 1060 6GB. Is that good or else should I choose MSI?
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That is nonsense, don't listen to him! The PSU can deliver up to 50A or 600W on that V12 rail. Its 99.9% your GPU. You've gotten a faulty one, it happens quite often actually. Just RMA it.
Typical load power (W): 65 (CPU) + 150 (GPU) + 50 (rest of system: RAM, motherboard, storage, etc.) = 265: lots of headroom in power.
Although I did say amount of power is not an issue, power supply still cannot be ruled out: harder to check is quality of power.
Anyway, if you get a new GPU and similar issues come up, power supply is a likely culprit.
Did you try switching the PCI-E slot?
That is nonsense, don't listen to him! The PSU can deliver up to 50A or 600W on that V12 rail. Its 99.9% your GPU. You've gotten a faulty one, it happens quite often actually. Just RMA it.
I honestly doubt my GPU. Major people who owns RX 480 are facing this issue. No matter what GPU Brand. I have seen videos on YouTube, and some guy who uses 850W from Corsair is still facing the same issue like me! So, it's not the PSU, Mobo or anything, it's the GPU as you said. I have tried many things until my two hair pieces fell off (Tested very hard). It's really a mystery why many users are experiencing the same! I doubt the 'AMD's RX 480', there's something weird going on with the cards. I am really disappointed with AMD.
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