- Joined
- Sep 11, 2013
- Messages
- 182 (0.04/day)
System Name | midnight toker |
---|---|
Processor | i7 Skylake QHQF (6700K ES) @ 4.2GHz |
Motherboard | ASRock Z170 Pro4S |
Cooling | Corsair H100i |
Memory | 16GB (2x8GB) Samsung DDR4 @ 3200MHz |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte Geforce Gtx 1080 Ti Gaming OC @ 2080MHz |
Storage | 128GB SSD, 75GB & 2TB HDDs |
Display(s) | Acer Predator XB1 XB271HU 27" 1440p 144Hz G-SYNC Monitor |
Case | Cooler Master MB511 |
Audio Device(s) | Philips SHP2000 headphones |
Power Supply | EVGA SuperNOVA 1300W G2 |
Mouse | Microsoft Wireless Desktop 3050 |
Keyboard | same |
Software | Arch Linux, Windows 10 Pro 64-Bit |
Hey pals. Here you go some questions as usual.
Should I keep my 7990 backplate on or just take it off due to overheat?
It has thermal pads for vrams. I read it helps dissipate heat (1-2ºc), but it seems to be holding lots of heat for a long time instead, since there's no dedicated cooling on the back of the card.
It feels like 100ºc+ after game sessions. Edit: they are 110ºc+ during heavy gaming.
Plus, the backplate doesn't relate to the main cooling system by any means, so it's basically on its own.
Some guy on another forum said it actually increases heat from his extensive experience, who knows though...
Seems to me it's more like "thermos".
Does anyone else have a card with backplate touching vrams? Will keeping it off do any harm (or any good)?
Thanks
_
PS: I didn't mention core or vrm1/vrm2 temperature readings, they are all good, those chips are fine on the well cooled side of the card.
However, something seems strange about the ~105ºc backplate, not designed for active cooling, sharing heat with half of the vrams on the back of the board with its thermal pads.
My case is always open and lying horizontally. Apart from decent ventilation, hot air goes up and all.
_
Solution: backplate off unless customized with sinks fit for active cooling.
Important remarks:
Should I keep my 7990 backplate on or just take it off due to overheat?
It has thermal pads for vrams. I read it helps dissipate heat (1-2ºc), but it seems to be holding lots of heat for a long time instead, since there's no dedicated cooling on the back of the card.
It feels like 100ºc+ after game sessions. Edit: they are 110ºc+ during heavy gaming.
Plus, the backplate doesn't relate to the main cooling system by any means, so it's basically on its own.
Some guy on another forum said it actually increases heat from his extensive experience, who knows though...
Seems to me it's more like "thermos".
Does anyone else have a card with backplate touching vrams? Will keeping it off do any harm (or any good)?
Thanks
_
PS: I didn't mention core or vrm1/vrm2 temperature readings, they are all good, those chips are fine on the well cooled side of the card.
However, something seems strange about the ~105ºc backplate, not designed for active cooling, sharing heat with half of the vrams on the back of the board with its thermal pads.
My case is always open and lying horizontally. Apart from decent ventilation, hot air goes up and all.
_
Solution: backplate off unless customized with sinks fit for active cooling.
Important remarks:
You could try this new to market heatsink:
View attachment 63194
or try these, stuck to the back plate, or the like: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...835&cm_re=heatsink-_-9SIA3TR18A6835-_-Product
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...5708154&cm_re=heatsink-_-35-708-154-_-Product
That's what will make any sort of air cooling useful on a sometimes even 120ºc+ backplate not designed for active cooling.^This..stick some sinks all over it
Titan X has twice the 7990 vram ammount, including on the board reverse. NVIDIA decided it should go plateless. Must be a good move.image: http://imagescdn.tweaktown.com/news/4/3/43953_02_closest-look-nvidia-geforce-gtx-titan-here.jpg
The Titan X has had its backplate removed, which I'm sure is because the GM200 GPU powering the Titan X and its 12GB of VRAM runs much hotter than the GTX 980. The GTX 980's backplate gets ridiculously hot as it is, so I think this is a great move by NVIDIA and something that needed to be done in order to keep the card from getting too hot.
The post above brought me an important conclusion as to taking off the plate for now:I don't really think that what makes the backplate hot is VRAM, I can assure you that after hours of benching on absurd voltages and insane memory frequencies I could touch my GPUs VRAM even when benching and they were warm at best. (Talking about my current GPUs now)
From my experience what made hot my 6990 backplates was the INSANE heat the two chips close to eachother were outputting.
I'm pretty sure it's the voltage regulation circuitry that radiates most of the heat to the backplate.
Let's suppose the big source of warmth is the pcb itself not vrams... My 7990 backplate has been 100ºc+ most of the time and its thermal pads (designed for thermal conduction) touch back vrams exclusively. As it features no decent cooling design, then this plate definitely transfers great, unnecessary heat to those vrams.
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