Sunday, August 23rd 2020
NVIDIA 12-pin Connector Pictured Next to 8-pin PCIe - It's Tiny
Over the weekend, we got some of the first pictures of a production-grade NVIDIA 12-pin graphics card power connector that debuts with the company's GeForce "Ampere" Founders Edition graphics cards. HardwareLuxx.de received a set of modular cables by Seasonic that can be plugged into the company's modular PSUs, directly putting out a 12-pin connector. The publication's editor Andreas Schilling posted this striking picture that is sure to change our perspective about the 12-pin connector - it is tiny!
Called the Molex Micro-Fit 3.0 12-pin connector, the NVIDIA 12-pin connector looks visibly smaller than a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, and only slightly broader. It yet uses high gauge wires and pins, so it can push up to 600 W of power - more power than two 8-pin connectors. The space-saving connector shouldn't just be easier to plug in, but also cable-manage, since you're only having to wrestle with one cable, even for a high-end graphics card. Not only is the connector NVIDIA-exclusive, but there are also indications that only the Founders Edition (reference design) GeForce "Ampere" cards feature it, while custom-design cards based on the GPUs make do with a bunch of 8-pin PCIe power connectors.
Source:
Andreas Schilling (Twitter)
Called the Molex Micro-Fit 3.0 12-pin connector, the NVIDIA 12-pin connector looks visibly smaller than a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, and only slightly broader. It yet uses high gauge wires and pins, so it can push up to 600 W of power - more power than two 8-pin connectors. The space-saving connector shouldn't just be easier to plug in, but also cable-manage, since you're only having to wrestle with one cable, even for a high-end graphics card. Not only is the connector NVIDIA-exclusive, but there are also indications that only the Founders Edition (reference design) GeForce "Ampere" cards feature it, while custom-design cards based on the GPUs make do with a bunch of 8-pin PCIe power connectors.
51 Comments on NVIDIA 12-pin Connector Pictured Next to 8-pin PCIe - It's Tiny
Oh wait.
Personally, I'm digging this smaller size much more. Should just be a new standard thought, if you ask me.
This kinda post is what makes the silly 'X vs Y' argument continue.... just shut up eh and carry yourself with a bit more dignity online lol Are you stupid or just a troll?
2. It is a "new" standard.
This is a standard Molex connector: www.molex.com/molex/products/part-detail/crimp_housings/0430251200
It's been a standard since at least 2018.
The idea that the new Ampere graphics card consumes more than 375 watts (necessitating three 8-pin 150-watt PCIe connectors or this new plug) is a bit concerning.
It's been stated the wire gauge is the same, diagrams show what I have said to be true regarding two six pin connectors having the same amount of positive terminals and negative terminal as the twelve pin connector. It seems the recommendation for a higher capacity PSU is only to allow the correct current to be drawn over the rail that supplies power. Time will tell if the wire can handle the heat, or detoriorate.
I'm happy to be proven wrong though. The thought of a person's $3,000 system going up in flames is saddening.
Even if the cable from the PSU to the PCIe connector is over-designed so that it can handle much more current than the PCIe standard says that it must, we don't know if the circuit inside the PSU has also been over-designed. The fire could start in the connectors or inside the PSU instead of in the cables. There's probably some safety margin above the design rating before we start a fire, but running two, three or four times the rated power is likely to be a bad thing.
Thinking about these standards... 6-pin is 75W, but 8-pin doubles the capacity to 150W? And now 12-pin brings it all the way up to 8x capacity? I do wonder how this math is working out, or maybe the 12-pin connector has some more assurances behind the gauge of wire or something.
These old 6-pin 75W and 8-pin 150W connectors were made from decades ago. Maybe tolerances / manufacturing has improved to the point where they feel its safe to improve the specifications of a new connector?
EDIT: Molex claims that micro-fit connectors can support 10.5 Amps (www.molex.com/molex/products/family/microfit_30). With 12-connectors, but 2-connectors per circuit (positive + negative leads), that's 10.5 Amps x 12V x 6 connections == 756W per 12-pin connector. Throw down a bit of a safety factor, and we're at 600W.
USB-C surely was similar: with those tiny connectors now pushing 100W to charge laptops when USB was initially only designed for just a few Watts.
Not to mention the hard limit of 5nm as it seems quantum tunneling is a major barrier to go denser than that in the consumer space and still be able to turn a profit. With 5nm being the barrier, the only way to get anywhere close to 600W+ would be MCM. Rumors are the FE cards will ship with the required adapter to use 3x 8pin PCIe connectors. So no need for a new PSU or new PSU cable just yet. If we are to believe the rumors, at least. Rumors indicate they are, and it'll only be for the FE cards. AIB cards will still use traditional PCIe power connectors. More likely 3x 8pin, as dual 8pin is only capable of 300W, which these cards are rumored to exceed at stock. Hence the new 12pin connector being able to go upto 600W.
:roll::roll::roll::roll::roll::roll: Oh man. Made my day Its 'a standard' like 20 inch rims are standard. They won't fit most cars, let's be real.
Then again, if there is any path to adoption it should be from top of GPU stacks on down. But physics don't lie and I really do think 250W worth of TDP in a case is more than enough coming from a GPU. It gets annoying to cool, and more expensive.