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Grant (SSSF)
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Message 1021981 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 17:49:34 UTC - in response to Message 1021875.  

I was going to post new pictures today but there has been a problem. Motherboard failure! New board tomorrow. New thread tomorrow.

No need for a new thread, just keep it in this one.

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Message 1022015 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 19:51:26 UTC - in response to Message 1021968.  

The mb was only 2 weeks old. Had problems from the start. I ordered a new mb last week cause i really, really hated this one! There was no OC on the mb or the 480 cards.

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Message 1022029 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 20:34:45 UTC

Oh my giddie aunt! Here's a replacement mobo for you.
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Message 1022047 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 21:21:58 UTC - in response to Message 1022029.  

only $915!!! that makes the GPU's seem cheap by comparison. /me rolls eyes, faints


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Message 1022056 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 21:49:18 UTC - in response to Message 1022029.  

Oh my giddie aunt! Here's a replacement mobo for you.


It is a nice one but I got this one...

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128446

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Message 1022082 - Posted: 2 Aug 2010, 22:52:15 UTC - in response to Message 1022056.  
Last modified: 2 Aug 2010, 22:55:36 UTC

What you want to do? :-)

7x GTX480 on one mobo? What a monster machine this will be!

If 2+ WUs/GPU, then maybe a 2x CPU (8 (or 12) threads each) mobo or a 12 threads CPU for single socket mobo would be well for well performance/support?

You have maybe infos about the PCIe cable connectors/connection? To now I didn't found infos about.
All 16 lanes of a PCIe x16 slot are connected and will be transferred?
They have a speed limit? PCIe 2.0 is possible?
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Message 1022184 - Posted: 3 Aug 2010, 10:31:31 UTC - in response to Message 1022082.  
Last modified: 3 Aug 2010, 10:53:43 UTC

What you want to do? :-)

7x GTX480 on one mobo? What a monster machine this will be!

If 2+ WUs/GPU, then maybe a 2x CPU (8 (or 12) threads each) mobo or a 12 threads CPU for single socket mobo would be well for well performance/support?

You have maybe infos about the PCIe cable connectors/connection? To now I didn't found infos about.
All 16 lanes of a PCIe x16 slot are connected and will be transferred?
They have a speed limit? PCIe 2.0 is possible?

Slots: Seven PCI Express 2.0 x16 slots (first, third, fifth and seventh slots working at x16 when up to four video cards are installed, and speed reduced to x8 when five or more video cards are installed)

That price in my link is Australian $. Average price in the US*: USD 595.00

Here is a link to more information about the board.
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Message 1022232 - Posted: 3 Aug 2010, 14:34:07 UTC - in response to Message 1022184.  
Last modified: 3 Aug 2010, 14:38:05 UTC

AFAIK, at least PCIe 2.0 x8 (or PCIe 1.0 x16) speed is needed for well CUDA crunching.
So if Jon's GIGABYTE mobo support this also he could let run 7 GTX480. WOW!


EDIT: But maybe faster PCIe speed is needed if 2+ WUs/GPU?
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Message 1022336 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 0:12:48 UTC

Good news and bad news. Th new mb came in installed. Everything was good until the fire. Not really a fire but smoke coming from the wires. The wires are from the Dual Power Supply Adapter Cable http://www.frozencpu.com/products/5637/cpa-167/Lian_Li_Dual_Power_Supply_Adapter_Cable.html. Small part of the Adapter and the 24pin plug melted. Pulled apart when it cooled but not sure if i want to use that psu. have a 1000W psu i can use in place of it.
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Message 1022345 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 0:29:57 UTC - in response to Message 1022336.  

Here's hoping it's the PSU and not something to do with the new MB.


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Message 1022347 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 0:34:26 UTC - in response to Message 1022336.  

Maybe too much wattage for the adapter?

Some infos in the specs?

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Message 1022356 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 0:49:48 UTC
Last modified: 4 Aug 2010, 0:51:27 UTC

I think it was the adapter. More damage to it that the 24pin plug. At the time there was the i7-980 and 3 cards. BTW i changed to i7-920 to a i7-980 from another computer.
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Message 1022360 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 1:13:16 UTC - in response to Message 1022356.  

A 12 thread-CPU is a very nice thing.. :-)

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Message 1022361 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 1:31:15 UTC - in response to Message 1022356.  

I think it was the adapter. More damage to it that the 24pin plug. At the time there was the i7-980 and 3 cards. BTW i changed to i7-920 to a i7-980 from another computer.

When I tried 2 power supplies I stripped a bit of the green and black wires going to the MB and ran a wire from green to green and black to black and they both started at the same time and ran fine...Had to use a second PS until my 1250 watt arrived.
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Message 1022374 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 2:19:41 UTC - in response to Message 1022232.  

AFAIK, at least PCIe 2.0 x8 (or PCIe 1.0 x16) speed is needed for well CUDA crunching.
So if Jon's GIGABYTE mobo support this also he could let run 7 GTX480. WOW!


EDIT: But maybe faster PCIe speed is needed if 2+ WUs/GPU?

I crunch for S@H with a 16x and a 4x pci-e slot as I have a GTX295 in each, So I don't know where You got the 8x requirement, As 4x or possibly even 2x would do just fine.
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Message 1022377 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 2:30:12 UTC - in response to Message 1022336.  
Last modified: 4 Aug 2010, 2:35:15 UTC

Good news and bad news. Th new mb came in installed. Everything was good until the fire. Not really a fire but smoke coming from the wires. The wires are from the Dual Power Supply Adapter Cable http://www.frozencpu.com/products/5637/cpa-167/Lian_Li_Dual_Power_Supply_Adapter_Cable.html. Small part of the Adapter and the 24pin plug melted. Pulled apart when it cooled but not sure if i want to use that psu. have a 1000W psu i can use in place of it.


i would think your power supplies are fine. problem is there are to few ground wire in that adapter connecting the ground plane togather. you have know way of knowing how much power that could be flowing thru it.
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Message 1022382 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 2:53:53 UTC - in response to Message 1022377.  

Good news and bad news. Th new mb came in installed. Everything was good until the fire. Not really a fire but smoke coming from the wires. The wires are from the Dual Power Supply Adapter Cable http://www.frozencpu.com/products/5637/cpa-167/Lian_Li_Dual_Power_Supply_Adapter_Cable.html. Small part of the Adapter and the 24pin plug melted. Pulled apart when it cooled but not sure if i want to use that psu. have a 1000W psu i can use in place of it.


i would think your power supplies are fine. problem is there are to few ground wire in that adapter connecting the ground plane togather. you have know way of knowing how much power that could be flowing thru it.

That cable is only supposed to allow the 2nd psu to turn on or off with the 1st psu, That's why the Green wire(power Good) and a Black wire(Ground) are only included.
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Message 1022388 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 3:46:55 UTC

"only suppose to" is the key, kind of like painting on load direction arrows on aircraft structure so the load knows where to go, lol.

so please explain why that was the wire that melted?
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Message 1022392 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 4:08:51 UTC - in response to Message 1022388.  

What if you would just turn the psu into always on ? I remember reading about that when I planned to turn one of my old power supplies into a poor mans lab psu. It only takes a power resistor. Here is the link to the page. You might have to dig a little. http://www.wikihow.com/Convert-a-Computer-ATX-Power-Supply-to-a-Lab-Power-Supply

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Message 1022393 - Posted: 4 Aug 2010, 4:29:46 UTC - in response to Message 1022388.  

"only suppose to" is the key, kind of like painting on load direction arrows on aircraft structure so the load knows where to go, lol.

so please explain why that was the wire that melted?

Well I'm not an electrician, Black carries no voltage as It's ground, It should only be carrying the signal for power good, Too small a wire gauge is My guess It's not the two small wires by themselves, It's the ones that carry the voltage, Like the Yellow(12v), Red(5v) and Orange(3.3v) wires. What I would like to know is which wire on which cable melted? The two wires, the Green and Black shouldn't do anything, If they did a metal paperclip would get warm and I've never seen that happen even once.



http://mail.ultraproducts.com/product_details.php?cPath=12&pPath=584&productID=584


http://www.performance-pcs.com/catalog/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=21193


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