Monday, June 12th 2023

GIGABYTE RTX 4090 WindForce V2 Unveiled, with Unique Tail-ended Power Connector

GIGABYTE GeForce RTX 4090 WindForce V2 may not be the company's most premium RTX 4090 custom-design graphics card, but it has arguably the best power connector design. Almost every custom RTX 4080 and RTX 4090 comes with a design where in the PCB is half or two-thirds the length of the card, and the remainder of the length is dedicated to the cooling solution, where the heatsink can extend along the thickness of the card. In case of the RTX 4090 WindForce V2, this extended portion of the cooler is recessed by half, exposing the tail end of the PCB. The 16-pin 12VHPWR power input is pointed toward the tail-end, rather than toward the top of the card.

This makes cabling very convenient, as it no longer needs to bend nearly 180° as it emerges from the back of your motherboard tray. The power cable goes straight into the connector with no bending up to a roughly 8 cm length, before making a 90° turn to the back of your motherboard tray, reducing mechanical strain on the connector. Even the NVIDIA-designed adapter included with the card (the one that converts 4x 8-pin to a 12VHPWR), should look neater. It's likely that as a WindForce-series product, this card offers the lowest tier of factory overclocks by GIGABYTE. You still get dual-BIOS, which lets you toggle between this factory-OC, and a Silent BIOS that runs the card at reference speeds, with tighter fan tuning. The selling point, however, is its unique power connector design.
Sources: harukaze5719 (Twitter), VideoCardz
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53 Comments on GIGABYTE RTX 4090 WindForce V2 Unveiled, with Unique Tail-ended Power Connector

#51
Ruru
S.T.A.R.S.
Haven't seen those in a loooooong time, probably the last time when I had a HD 4890 13 years ago.

Actually why they even moved the power connectors to the side of the card?
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#52
AusWolf
KissamiesHaven't seen those in a loooooong time, probably the last time when I had a HD 4890 13 years ago.

Actually why they even moved the power connectors to the side of the card?
Because high-end cards started to be too long to fit into your average ATX tower with the drive cage in the front and all that. The real question is, why did small cards get the same treatment?
Posted on Reply
#53
Ruru
S.T.A.R.S.
AusWolfBecause high-end cards started to be too long to fit into your average ATX tower with the drive cage in the front and all that. The real question is, why did small cards get the same treatment?
Good point there. 8800 GTX was a pretty long card in 2006 standards so it's understandable so they followed that trend with generation after another.
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