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Ok, so this thread seems to be spiraling out into a war. Should we lock and load?
In all seriousness, here is what it boils down to:
1: AMD decided to put a 6 pin instead of an 8 pin reference to look lower power instead of being smart and letting us have the clocking and less problems.
2: AMD needs to release a driver fix to stop the card from overdrawing from the PCIE and either change it to the 6 pin or limit it.
3: Even if you buy this card, your not going to kill your motherboard with it unless you have the most basic/cheap motherboard possible and even then I would be skeptical.
Fact is this should not be a problem but it is. Is it a big problem that is going to result in dead motherboards? No because motherboards especially in this day and age are pretty tough even on the cheap side. I have overloaded a motherboard's PCIE's before, it takes alot to actually do some damage to it. But the fact is AMD was beyond foolish to not only not put an 8 pin, but to let this pass through like this instead of allowing the 6 pin to take the brunt. PSU's in this day and age have an 8 pin minimum even on the most cheap entry level one you would want to buy to support your gaming rig (Speaking ~500watt). Either way though, this does not ruin the card or the value of what your getting, but it definitely makes after market variants look alot more appealing.
In all seriousness, here is what it boils down to:
1: AMD decided to put a 6 pin instead of an 8 pin reference to look lower power instead of being smart and letting us have the clocking and less problems.
2: AMD needs to release a driver fix to stop the card from overdrawing from the PCIE and either change it to the 6 pin or limit it.
3: Even if you buy this card, your not going to kill your motherboard with it unless you have the most basic/cheap motherboard possible and even then I would be skeptical.
Fact is this should not be a problem but it is. Is it a big problem that is going to result in dead motherboards? No because motherboards especially in this day and age are pretty tough even on the cheap side. I have overloaded a motherboard's PCIE's before, it takes alot to actually do some damage to it. But the fact is AMD was beyond foolish to not only not put an 8 pin, but to let this pass through like this instead of allowing the 6 pin to take the brunt. PSU's in this day and age have an 8 pin minimum even on the most cheap entry level one you would want to buy to support your gaming rig (Speaking ~500watt). Either way though, this does not ruin the card or the value of what your getting, but it definitely makes after market variants look alot more appealing.