Wednesday, January 25th 2012

EVGA Offers Overclockers the $100 EPower Board

EVGA has now released the EPower Board, a VRM board which can be hooked up to a motherboard and/or graphics card (some soldering required) and provide more watts required for uber-overclocking.

This warranty-voiding device features a 10-phase main output, a 3-phase secondary output, digital PWM (for the main output), three 6-pin PCIe power connectors, plus EVBot and fan support. The EPower Board costs $99.99 and is "intended only for advanced users with electronics experience."
Add your own comment

31 Comments on EVGA Offers Overclockers the $100 EPower Board

#1
Completely Bonkers
Serious hardcore product. Nice. To separate the men from the boys



In case it wasnt obvious, check the size of that thing. As "big" as a "small" Graphics Card.

+++++++++++

Installation

Posted on Reply
#2
imitation
Am i getting this right? This is an adjustable step-down regulator that replaces your onboard VRMs? Also, it doesn't seem to offer any automated voltage shuffling, ala CnQ or SpeedStep?
Posted on Reply
#3
Maban
Would be cool to have one of these. Would be even cooler to know how to use it.
Posted on Reply
#4
erocker
*
imitationAm i getting this right? This is an adjustable step-down regulator that replaces your onboard VRMs? Also, it doesn't seem to offer any automated voltage shuffling, ala CnQ or SpeedStep?
It states it supplies additional power, so it doesn't replace the onboard VRM's. This product isn't targeted towards people who use CnQ or SpeedStep.
Posted on Reply
#5
rewarder
erockerIt states it supplies additional power, so it doesn't replace the onboard VRM's. This product isn't targeted towards people who use CnQ or SpeedStep.
Yep :) It's targeted towards the exact opposite of that. To the people who deactivate everything that has to do with saving energy. No seriously, for extreme overclockers this thing is like god on a PCB but for everybody else it's useless and they'll most certainly ruin their graphics card with it.
Posted on Reply
#6
imitation
erockerIt states it supplies additional power, so it doesn't replace the onboard VRM's.
Well, the instructions state (step 1) to disconnect the onboard inductors, rendering the whole VRM unit useless. Also, it states that you might need to manipulate your VGA VRM's "power good" line, since the onboard VRM got disconnected.
If you connect two voltage sources in parallel, every minor difference in output voltage will result in a (theoretical) unlimited current from the source with the higher voltage to the one with lower voltage.
In high-current setups, like CPU VRMs, trace resistance somewhat equalizes output voltage, but you'd still need some feedback for the additional voltage source to adjust itself to the onboard VRMs.
erockerThis product isn't targeted towards people who use CnQ or SpeedStep.
As if it wasn't obvious :D Lack of on-the-fly, precise automated voltage adjustment (CnQ or SS) results in what i wrote above.
Posted on Reply
#7
The Von Matrices
To me it seems that the 3 6-pin PCIe connectors would provide too little power for a high-end card. I know that this product isn't aimed at people who adhere to PCIe specifications, but wouldn't the 3 6-pin power connectors only be able to supply 225W, less than the 300W that 2 8-pin connectors on some stock cards can supply?

Also, does anyone else think it's kind of funny that they're soldering this board on a low end, old card (NVidia 8600 GT)?
Posted on Reply
#8
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
this is something for the crazies on LN2, who need the extra power to break records.
Posted on Reply
#9
DOM
Musselsthis is something for the crazies on LN2, who need the extra power to break records.
we have a winner :laugh:

but yeah this is for older cards that didnt have the power fore MORE Mhz on ln2 :cool:
Posted on Reply
#10
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
Yup, you can tell it's for phase change and LN2 enthusiasts. Look at instruction number 13.
Posted on Reply
#11
Red_Machine
My RAMBUS-equipped Pentium 4 rig has a plug-in VRM board next to the CPU.
Posted on Reply
#12
badtaylorx
how long before someone uses this to get a cellery to 9GHz???
Posted on Reply
#13
Steven B
hell yea a hardcore volterra VRm for 100 bucks.
Posted on Reply
#14
OneCool
I need 2 of these :rockout:


One for my wifes Netbook and one for an old 9700non pro :rockout:
Posted on Reply
#15
Wile E
Power User
The Von MatricesTo me it seems that the 3 6-pin PCIe connectors would provide too little power for a high-end card. I know that this product isn't aimed at people who adhere to PCIe specifications, but wouldn't the 3 6-pin power connectors only be able to supply 225W, less than the 300W that 2 8-pin connectors on some stock cards can supply?

Also, does anyone else think it's kind of funny that they're soldering this board on a low end, old card (NVidia 8600 GT)?
8 pin connectors just add 2 extra grounds. 6 pins with high gauge wire are plenty.
Posted on Reply
#16
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
Wile E8 pin connectors just add 2 extra grounds. 6 pins with high gauge wire are plenty.
Actually, AFAIK, the 8-pin adds the requirement for 3 +12v wires. The 6-pin spec only calls for 2 +12v wires, though most higher end PSUs still use 3, and with 6+2 becoming the norm the 3 +12v wires are usually present.

Not that any of this matters, anyone that knows how to use this device properly knows what their PSUs are really capable of and knows if their PSU's 6-pins are enough or not.
Posted on Reply
#17
Wile E
Power User
Nope. 3 12V+ on both 6 and 8 pin PCIe power connectors.



And I am looking directly at the 8 and 6 sticking out of my 580. They match the diagram.
Posted on Reply
#18
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
they add an extra wire to an existing pin, is what he's saying. look up some pics, and you'll see two 12V wires to a single plug on most PSU's these days.
Posted on Reply
#19
radrok
The untouchable, right? :)
Posted on Reply
#20
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
Wile ENope. 3 12V+ on both 6 and 8 pin PCIe power connectors.

img476.imageshack.us/img476/3329/pcieplugdiagramoa5.png

And I am looking directly at the 8 and 6 sticking out of my 580. They match the diagram.
Nope, go look up the spec, the 3rd +12v is optional on the 6-pin but required on the 8-pin. Like I said.:rolleyes:

And any PSU that uses 6+2 connectors, like your Galaxy, will have all 3 because the connector has to follow the 8-pin spec.
Musselsthey add an extra wire to an existing pin, is what he's saying. look up some pics, and you'll see two 12V wires to a single plug on most PSU's these days.
What I mean is that the middle +12v pin is often missing completely.
Posted on Reply
#22
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
This is just a board hard overclockers have been making on their own for decades now
Posted on Reply
#23
TheMailMan78
Big Member
I wish I had disposable hardware to test this out with. Looks like something fun to learn.
Posted on Reply
#24
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
eidairaman1This is just a board hard overclockers have been making on their own for decades now
Yeah, I remember seeing someone using the PWM cut off from an old 8800GTX to replace the one on, IIRC, a GTX570.
Posted on Reply
#25
HybridChiller
Use an VRM from a 8800gtx on a GTX570 ?

That really doesn't have any benefit.

But using VRM from 570 on a 8800gtx is good
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Dec 21st, 2024 21:59 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts