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NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Pictured?

Anyone with 2 brain cells could tell you that air cannot move through solid metal, but upon contact it cools it depending on temperature of the air.

The flow of air once it hits though depends on which direction the gaps dictate.

Saying they are designed that way is not correct, it is physically impossible for air to dissipate any other way with such a design.

Anyone with 2 brain cells probably figured out what I said, what solid metal, what are you talking about ? The air is exhausted through the sides of the heatsinks because the PCB is in the way, so yes it's designed that way. For part of this design the air supposedly is meant to go directly perpendicularly through the heatsink, except that, like I pointed out, the that area looks closed off.

It's not like such design defies physical laws.

It doesn't, it's just severely inefficient.
 
Anyone with 2 brain cells probably figured out what I said, what solid metal, what are you talking about ? The air is exhausted through the sides of the heatsinks because the PCB is in the way, so yes it's designed that way. For part of this design the air supposedly is meant to go directly perpendicularly through the heatsink, except that, like I pointed out, the that area looks closed off.
There is no PCB in the way in the front of the card IMO, it ends where the arrow shaped shroud begins. Picture link here.

Remember, the fan is on the rear side = PCB side, so there's no room for both a PCB AND a fan at the same spot. (Unless there are two PCB's, not very likely.)
1591530933664.png

The whole reasoning came from the idea that it would work like this. (Old GTX 960 as an example)
1591530554641.png
Air going straight through, just like I and at least two others tried to explain with excellent Paint skills. Then I realized that there's probably a vapor chamber in the way, so it's not possible.
This isn't about me being right or wrong, just a chain of thoughts.

Do you feel up to date now?
 
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There is no PCB in the way in the front of the card IMO, it ends where the arrow shaped shroud begins

I feel like giving up but I'll try one more time. Usually in open air coolers the PCB is in the way, like in that 2080ti example you gave which I was clearly referencing.
 
Usually in open air coolers the PCB is in the way, like in that 2080ti example you gave which I was clearly referencing.
Yup, you're right there. I did some editing.. This time the fan is on the back, so it can't be any PCB there.
 
Yup, you're right there. I did some editing.. This time the fan is on the back, so it can't be any PCB there.
There are two fans, one on each side. The front/bottom fan, just like any traditional open air cooler, blows straight into the PCB (and thus whatever is on top of it, whether heatpipes or vapor chamber, with the air then turning 90° and going partially out the slot covers and partially back into the case through the exposed fins on the front. The back fan sits on the same plane as the pcb and base of the cooler, so its fins can't be connected to that vapor chamber - vapor chambers are flat, after all. Which is why I brought up the possibility of heatpipes connected to the vapor chamber earlier, though that is a terribly inelegant solution. Either that, the whole thing uses heatpipes (a regression from earlier designs) or the entire other half of the cooler cools only the VRM (which would be beyond stupid given that the GPU+VRAM likely outputs 200-225W of heat and the VRM 25-50.

Either way, this design seems problematic.
 
It's also very unnatural to have the hot air going both up and down, the heat naturally rises up.

VRM 25-50.

That's way too much for some VRMs, they usually top out at about 15-20W for that kind of current.
 
It's also very unnatural to have the hot air going both up and down, the heat naturally rises up.



That's way too much for some VRMs, they usually top out at about 15-20W for that kind of current.
That's true, I was trying to be generous and add in some headroom for overclocking :)

As for convection, even the weakest fan can beat that easily, so the absolute direction of airflow only really matters if you're designing specifically to utilize convection in the first place. If you have a front intake and rear exhaust on your case, convection inside of the case is near meaningless.
For what, exactly? If this is true/the design...IF... i'd imagine this was tested. I doubt it will be a "problem" though (surely it will work as designed and keep the gpu running where nvidia wants it to).
Problematic in terms of maximising cooling potential per volume while maintaining compatibility. I obviously also assume this has been tested extensively if it is real at all, but nonetheless it stands out as an example of engineering for the sake of engineering (and partially for the sake of looking like engineering, of course) rather than aiming to make as optimal a design as possible. Design simplicity is not a quality Nvidia tends to favor though, what with the near infinite number of screws on their founders edition coolers, so I wouldn't put it past them to say "screw it, let's ignore complexity altogether and just make something we think is cool".
 
Either way, the PCB looks crazy short for a high end card.
 
I changed my mind. As someone pointed out, this cooler has probably a vapor chamber. If so, how can it possibly exhaust air in the underside of the card? (see pic in quote) Unlike heatpipe heatsinks, vapor chamber heatsinks doesn't let air straight through. Like someone else said, we can't see anything between those fins on the underside anyway, which is highly unlikely if that indeed was an exhaust. Maybe it's just fins on the underside of the vapor chamber, which makes this part (front, underside in case) passively cooled. (Yeah it can be a combination of VC and heatpipes, but still, we can't see anything in there anyway.)
Here's the vapor chamber of the 2080 TI FE. Pretty much no air, or light, comes through.
View attachment 158149

Yep i came to the same conclusion . I was the person who suggested the vapor chamber but i agree that on the '' VRM '' section if there is a vapor chamber there is no way for air to exhaust downwards .

Maybe as you said it's a mixed cooling solution , vapor chamber for core/memory and heat pipes ( which will allow the fan to blow downwards ) for the VRM .
 
Maybe as you said it's a mixed cooling solution , vapor chamber for core/memory and heat pipes ( which will allow the fan to blow downwards ) for the VRM .
that'd seem reasonable.
who puts a vapor chamber on vrm ?
 
This looks fake as hell and also the card is far too early - rumors have it pinned at Q4 2020 which is at the very least three months away. OEMs mustn't even have the chips at this point.

Edit: some interesting analysis hinting that the card/leak could be very much real:
Well make your mind up>? Real or fake? Cos looks real on first view. But you in the first case, so adamant its a fake. Explain more why GURU. Or dont. Sounds better to me actually. Flip flop. Back bone made of jelly.
 
This looks so cool!
GJ NVIDIA!

New renders:
 
Honestly the more i look at this design the more it grows on me . It combines maximum heat sink area with minimum useless plastic shroud all this with 0 compromise to aesthetics !

Annotation 2020-06-07 164206.png
 
Makes sense to me in almost every way, apart from the fact that I think the front fan should be a radial/blower outward blowing fan and not an axial down-blowing fan.

The front fan obviously exhausts out via the angled slots in the centre section. I'll assume this section is covered in a vapor chamber and with closed sides around the fan as well, the choice of an axial fan instead of a radial fan is an odd one - probably chosen for looks rather than functionaliy.

The rear fan obviously exhausts through the front of the card - you can just about see the heatpipes in the photo of the rear of the card.

Personally, I think the PCIe power cables will go along the top edge, right by the slot cover. I don't see them dumping PCIe power connectors on the end of the card like they did with the RTX 20x0FE because that was a mess even with a simple single-sided cooler and regular rectangular PCB.
 
This looks so cool!
GJ NVIDIA!

New renders:

3D artists have taken their time to show the RTX 3080 graphics card at different angles, as the original photographs were simply no match to give us a proper look at the design

I like how they made it such that the fan can be seen through the fins even though in the pictures that isn't the case at all :).
 
looks like this is gonna be fun to clean
 
I like how they made it such that the fan can be seen through the fins even though in the pictures that isn't the case at all :).
You could argue that since the fan is black, the fins are dark, the surface where the gpu was put down is black and the low quality of the photos, as well, there's no much way for the light reflecting on those dark surface to come through.
 
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Hmmm

After exchange rate to Cnd$ and 13% tax, I think I'd rather have a whole set of new appliances instead.
 
Hmmm

After exchange rate to Cnd$ and 13% tax, I think I'd rather have a whole set of new appliances instead.
I feel you.
was thinking about cpu upgrade.3600/10400f + mobo + ddr4
for what it would cost me I got a new case (with extra fans),new heaphones with a dac and a new printer.

ampere/rdna2 is a must buy tho.I bought a card every gen cause I just like new stuff.started with 7870-290-980-980ti-1080-1080Ti-2070S.
 
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I would not be surprised if AMD, copies this design on their next gen RDNA3 once again...
 
I would not be surprised if AMD, copies this design on their next gen RDNA3 once again...
if it's not patented and locked by nvidia then they're free to do so.
 
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