OK, a bit of progress. Not there yet, but so far, so good.
This was the first startup after piecing it back together, really in bench test mode. Did not want to pack everything up, hit the button only to discover there's a problem requiring disassembly.
It's running as these photos were taken. This was the second attempt to start, the first try resulted in no video, and a diagnostic code with lights AND sound that got my attention. Shut it down, started researching codes, only to learn there was no diagnostic code listed for 5, 2, 3/3 flashes ending with 3 flashes and beeps. Hmmm. Time to scratch the head a bit. Went through everything, making sure things were secure, plugged where they should be, made certain the monitors were switched on. Fired up again, then the Dell logo shows up and it goes right to pre-boot testing - and that's when I remembered removing the HDD carrier with the built-in mini fan had triggered the pre-boot test previously. Sure enough, not getting a response from the fan reports it failing. Next step is disable that fan in the BIOS. Also got the same beep/flash codes, so the issue the first attempt was the monitors were not on, and thus I did not see the pre-boot test running.
First two pics show the two fans added to pull more air from the front of the case, hopefully getting more heat off the GPUs. If I can avoid adding cooling to those, all the better. With the dual cards and each one taking up two slots, I'm not even certain they can be cooled. The fact they've cost me 2 PCIe slots is annoying enough.
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Next two photos - the cooler rests on top of the 5820. It is surprisingly quiet with the three 120mm fans, The side shot really is reason to celebrate. It's running with the side panel off. Looks like we finally beat the intrusion switch, alarm, PITA. Not 100% out of the woods yet. Uncertain of the impact of multiple changes, the ATX pass-through was not connected, although everything else on the cooler is functioning, pump and fan status, temp probes functioning. The temp probes are all reporting 2 degrees Celsius lower than HWINFO64 (26 vs 28). Makes sense, the water block probes are stuck to the top and 2 sides. HWINFO 64 is picking up its temps internally. You may also notice the 18" cable plugged into the Power Distribution Board - That socket was previously unused and intended for a 2 CPU configuration. I wanted access to additional 12 volt power, so purchased a cable, and have already confirmed there's 12 volts in each of the PCIe connectors - the 6 and 6+2 pin. Another win. Once I get a cable made with PCIe 6 or 8 female on one end and SATA power15 pin female on the other, the rear fans and their Noctua controller will be installed. Another option I'm considering for those fans is using an independent, variable power source, that way I can run them up or silence them at will. Believe me, those fans are load and they will move a lot of air. 2000-10,000 RPM, and a 1 amp load. With two of them, this is why I did not want to use a MB header for power. Not sure if I'll tackle the rest tonight, may be tomorrow. Adios!
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Last two shots are more of the side panel MIA. A good look at the NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000's consuming a LOT of real estate. The PCIe card support is not installed since the next step is inserting the ATX Passthrough in the loop to test the theory. Stand by!
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