Hey bryanW1995, I'm not allowed to agree with you or appear friendly towards you in any way. I'm going to have to disagree with you now then.
Cheers!
Sorry i dont understand? Am i supposed to be some bryanW1995 or what?
Hey bryanW1995, I'm not allowed to agree with you or appear friendly towards you in any way. I'm going to have to disagree with you now then.
Cheers!
This isn't true Mental. I responded full well to Nitromullet. I don't feel comfortable overvolting any of my pc hardware. I am not experienced at this and 1.2v has been shown to be way too high even if I wasn't using 267.91 which disables overvolting.
i bit the bullet and installed mine before i left for work this morning. i'll play some ghostbusters in 3D and see if my card lives![]()
I am "sure and positive" there is a test you can run. Why not overclock as far as you can, without voltage increase ? Or barely increase it ?
At least show us something that backs up your claims that the problem is no longer present.
If you want to attempt to post facts, at least get them straight.
Fact: 8 review cards blew up, 6 independent reviewers, 2 reviewers had 2 cards blow up each and four reviewers had one card blow up...
Two cards dead for these reviewers as well
http://www.sweclockers.com/artikel/1...boven-i-dramat
No information about settings. Done in a lab with camera setup, yet without any other information. Maybe they are using 1.2V too.
You need to read more carefully. Read the reason of failure from reviewers.
http://www.hardware.fr/articles/825-...e-gtx-590.html
Wrong driver.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/A...TX_590/27.html
1.2v, almost 300mv extra voltage.
http://tbreak.com/tech/2011/03/zotac-gtx-590-review/3/
125mv extra voltage.
Two cards dead for these reviewers as well
http://www.sweclockers.com/artikel/1...boven-i-dramat
No information about settings. Done in a lab with camera setup, yet without any other information. Maybe they are using 1.2V too.
Two cards dead for these reviewers
http://translate.google.ca/translate?hl=en&sl=ro&tl=en&u=http://lab501. ro%2Fplaci-video%2Fnvidia-geforce-gtx-590-studiu-de-overclocking%2F12
1.3V was the goal...
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...9&postcount=37
This is a claim about weak VRM, not proof.
Are you even reading what you post?
i guess nvidia should start putting on the box "using the provided driver may result in phsyical damage to your graphics card. use at your own risk or continue to wait for an update online before use."
Read Ryan's post please.i guess nvidia should start putting on the box "using the provided driver may result in phsyical damage to your graphics card. use at your own risk or continue to wait for an update online before use."
You missed the part where the author believes that the card should have 2x8Pin+6pin connector, will suck more than 400Watt electricity and requires tower HS for each GPU.From Lab 501:
"Instead of this we have but the failure of the year for that team ready PCB design and the design of the VRM has made a very stupid thing, under the most bleak expectations, and it's impossible for anyone to producing something weaker that at this level."
Pretty obvious cost cutting was the no.1 criteria for component selection when it came to performance ... except for the GPU selection. Very odd. Just doesn't make sense to use the 580 chips and then leave so much performance on the table, especially with the available cooling system headroom ... except maybe to the bean counters.
I see no upside for Nvidia here.
NVidia most likely pushed these cards to the edge/limit/redline themselves and left no real room for the tweakers to do their normal thing.
This, is a fair and valid claim.Well, I do think that nVidia pushed the limits of the GTX 590 leaving no overclocking margins, may be it pushed it too far, otherwise they wouldn't had disabled the GTX 590 overclocking abilities with their latest drivers while the HD 6990 overclocks fine.
This is less fair, but valid claim.I heard that the issue is because they only used five 32A noname brand voltage regulators while the HD 6990 had four 40A Volterra voltage regulators which gives the HD 6990 more power that it would ever use.
Define Enthusiast class. Is a hardware Enthusiast class with a factory setting only unleash 1% of its performance, and you can acquire the rest through player sliders?Enthusiast class hardware should always have the best in class component quality for the sake of reliability.
Really?While we all know that the GTX 590 GPU's consumes far more power than competitor's equivalent,
375 Watt, PCI Express standard.then why skimp on the power circuitry?
What is the warranty on 6990 after flipping the switch? What is the yellow stick said again?While we know that such high end SKU's have very little margins in terms of profits and I'm certainly sure that the GTX 590 is more expensive to manufacture due to its complex PCB memory BUS and bigger chips, they should had invest a bit more in quality parts and increase the price a bit, as it would be faster than the HD 6990 and hence justifiable.
End users discussing electrical specifications/tolerances, naming and 2nd guessing component use and design is only so 'helpful'. Most people have no electronic schooling, nor the ability to troubleshoot to the component level. So comparing one board with its components to another design is the proverbial apples to oranges.
Define Enthusiast class. Is a hardware Enthusiast class with a factory setting only unleash 1% of its performance, and you can acquire the rest through player sliders?
What is the warranty on 6990 after flipping the switch? What is the yellow stick said again?
What is the warranty on 6990 after flipping the switch? What is the yellow stick said again?
It is true that it appears that one can put more voltage into 6690 than 590.Enthusiast class hardware allow for higher quality components, good overclocking margins and very good performance. Unfortunately the GTX 590 is a half class enthusiast hardware as it barely matches the stock HD 6990 and can't be overclocked at all. The HD 6990 can be overclocked up to 960MHz like apoppin did.![]()
If the card dies without OC, then you can get a replacement card or refund. I don't think we need to argue about the terms of warranty. If you OC and ended up killing your card, that is another story. Agree? Now isn't it dumb not to max out the slider on 6990? Why do they even put the switch in? What does flipping it means? I means you are putting mobo and PSU on overdrive. I won't be surprise seeing mobo and PSU dying because they are being ran out of spec. Don't you agree?Well, XFX is giving warranty for those who flip the switch, what warranty can you have with a burnt card? Another swap with a similar card that eventually will die again??
Well, I prefer a card that doesn't require OC. In fact, since when OC is an requirement? What happens to the plug and play idea?Enthusiast hardware overclocks much better than the GTX 590, so GTX 590 isn't tweakable at all, so player sliders for nothing...., specially when nVidia disabled overclocking, they did for a reason.... :roleyes:
Define screwed. If I brought a card and it set on fire before I plug it into the PC, and no refund or exchange, then I will be upset and bitch about it. If I brought a card, and killed it because I don't know how to overclock, I will probably STFU and QQ quietly.If you bought the card from amd you are screwed, but you probably know that amd dont sell cards.
I was wondering, and i did post this sometime back. Can one fiddle around with voltages using a HD6990? The TPU review didn't touch the voltage.
Well, I prefer a card that doesn't require OC. In fact, since when OC is an requirement? What happens to the plug and play idea?