- Joined
- Jul 21, 2018
- Messages
- 773 (0.33/day)
- Location
- Germany
System Name | FATTYDOVE-R-SPEC |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9 10980XE |
Motherboard | EVGA X299 Dark |
Cooling | Water (1x 240mm, 1x 280mm, 1x 420mm + 2x Mo-Ra 360 external radiator) |
Memory | 64GB DDR4 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 2080 Super / RTX 3090 |
Storage | Crucial MX500 |
Display(s) | 24", 1440p, freesync, 144hz |
Case | Open Benchtable (OBT) |
Audio Device(s) | beyerdynamic MMX 300 |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova T2 1600W |
Mouse | OG steelseries Sensei |
Keyboard | steelseries 6Gv2 |
Software | Windows 10 |
TLDR: Inflated numbers from watt-meter device, finally found the culprit in an OCP/OVP protection power strip.
EDIT [SOLVED]:
The wattage measurement was off, because of an OCP strip that I used. This one, and only this one and not the other OCP and OVP strips I have mess up with the measurement. It got inflated by over 2x.
I have tested my current daily rig on full GPU load on both GPUs and saw 1210W from that wonky strip.
When I switched over to a different power strip I suddenly see 545W. Which is the correct value (The 2080 Super reports 114W draw with my undervolt and the 3090 reports 275W draw with my undervolt). Since my CPU is currently undervolted for max. efficiency as well this all adds up perfectly.
[Original post below]
Aye ye fine lads and lasses!
I got something started when I joined our WCG-team and decided I finally need to know what my monster machine is pulling from the wall and my wallet each week.
So I got myself a power-meter, this one to be precise, and wanted to see what I get at idle, 100% CPU-load and while benchmarking the Vega 64.
Specs of the meter thingy:
Measured range current: 0.01 - 16 A
Measuring accuracy current: +/-1% or +/-0.01 A
Measuring range power: 0.2 - 3600 W
Measuring accuracy power: +/-1% or +/-0.2 W
The numbers I got are high, but I kinda expected this. Then again I looked at what my parts are supposed to draw and that got me thinking.
Idle 243W // CPU 100% load 643W // Running Heaven benchmark 910W.
I know a Threadripper (1950X) build with Vega is power hungry, but what got me thinking is, at 643W CPU-load my Vega was in idle and that would mean the CPU alone gobbles 400W+ total. This is at 1.25V and 3.675GHz. A slight OC and not 4+GHz suicide runs. The Vega is under water but I run it in my CS:GO profile which is stock power limit! I can´t believe a single stock Vega can make a 1000W PSU sweat. Sure someone like @buildzoid might see that, but not with stock power limit?!
I can rule out that the additional power has to do with the cooling system, because the pumps are a seperate plug that is currently in a completly different phase and the fan speeds are fixed by a fan controller and do not change between idle or load. This system has no HDD, no optical drive. Just an M.2 SSD, the mobo, GPU and CPU.
So I got to think my tool of measurement must read bs. Which is why I plugged it with my 1800x system. It features the same voltage and clock (e.g. it is basically half of the TR), aio watercooling. RM850i PSU from Corsair. And the power meter reads exactly the same as the PSUs build-in stuff does. 105W idle power draw and 200W total system draw on 100% CPU load. That is with multiple HDDs, an optical drive and a fan controller with multiple 140mm fans + the two fans from the rad.
After that I now think that either my little monster has a hunger that starts to frighten me (if one day I stop posting pls send help) or that something messes up the figures. Either some build in protection or filter from the PSU or god knows what.
My question would be, to anyone who knows how power meters work: How do these devices work, and what could possibly upset it?
EDIT [SOLVED]:
The wattage measurement was off, because of an OCP strip that I used. This one, and only this one and not the other OCP and OVP strips I have mess up with the measurement. It got inflated by over 2x.
I have tested my current daily rig on full GPU load on both GPUs and saw 1210W from that wonky strip.
When I switched over to a different power strip I suddenly see 545W. Which is the correct value (The 2080 Super reports 114W draw with my undervolt and the 3090 reports 275W draw with my undervolt). Since my CPU is currently undervolted for max. efficiency as well this all adds up perfectly.
[Original post below]
Aye ye fine lads and lasses!
I got something started when I joined our WCG-team and decided I finally need to know what my monster machine is pulling from the wall and my wallet each week.
So I got myself a power-meter, this one to be precise, and wanted to see what I get at idle, 100% CPU-load and while benchmarking the Vega 64.
Specs of the meter thingy:
Measured range current: 0.01 - 16 A
Measuring accuracy current: +/-1% or +/-0.01 A
Measuring range power: 0.2 - 3600 W
Measuring accuracy power: +/-1% or +/-0.2 W
The numbers I got are high, but I kinda expected this. Then again I looked at what my parts are supposed to draw and that got me thinking.
Idle 243W // CPU 100% load 643W // Running Heaven benchmark 910W.
I know a Threadripper (1950X) build with Vega is power hungry, but what got me thinking is, at 643W CPU-load my Vega was in idle and that would mean the CPU alone gobbles 400W+ total. This is at 1.25V and 3.675GHz. A slight OC and not 4+GHz suicide runs. The Vega is under water but I run it in my CS:GO profile which is stock power limit! I can´t believe a single stock Vega can make a 1000W PSU sweat. Sure someone like @buildzoid might see that, but not with stock power limit?!
I can rule out that the additional power has to do with the cooling system, because the pumps are a seperate plug that is currently in a completly different phase and the fan speeds are fixed by a fan controller and do not change between idle or load. This system has no HDD, no optical drive. Just an M.2 SSD, the mobo, GPU and CPU.
So I got to think my tool of measurement must read bs. Which is why I plugged it with my 1800x system. It features the same voltage and clock (e.g. it is basically half of the TR), aio watercooling. RM850i PSU from Corsair. And the power meter reads exactly the same as the PSUs build-in stuff does. 105W idle power draw and 200W total system draw on 100% CPU load. That is with multiple HDDs, an optical drive and a fan controller with multiple 140mm fans + the two fans from the rad.
After that I now think that either my little monster has a hunger that starts to frighten me (if one day I stop posting pls send help) or that something messes up the figures. Either some build in protection or filter from the PSU or god knows what.
My question would be, to anyone who knows how power meters work: How do these devices work, and what could possibly upset it?
Last edited by a moderator: