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Unofficial 12V-2x6V Power Connector Melts NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090

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They uses 110V/220V, that's different.

5090 runs on 12V 50A, and the working temperature >60C.
So 1x 6AWG, or 2x 10AWG
Give it some safe room and the solution could be just scale up the original 6 pin design with 10 AWG wires and connectors

View attachment 384450

Go Big Vanessa Lachey GIF by CBS
Or maybe we shouldn't have 600 W GPUs? I know, heresy, but what if...? :rolleyes:
 
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If the plug works correctly then 12 pins is fine. It's been fine for the 6-pin and 8-pin GPU plugs. 8 pins for the CPU power plugs are doing just fine too.

According to spec, for 8-pin, the 3 live wires only share maximum load of 13A (150W)
Even 1x 18AWG wire could handle that load.
And there are three wires in a 8-pin plug to spread the load.
So it is "safe" even in a case of "one wire carries all the load"

But Nvidia's 12pin isn't.
The spec was 50A and putting 50A in "one wire carries all the load" situation would blow the whole thing up.
 
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They uses 110V/220V, that's different.

I don't think you understand my point.

Go to Home Depot and feel 12 AWG or 16 AWG wire. Its thick, inflexible, bulky and hard to work with. By the time you're talking about 6 AWG wire that's needed to carry 50 Amps safely, its a specialty wire that I don't think you'd see in any common situation.

You might see 6AWG on central home air conditioners or maybe generators. Its very rarely used given how big, and expensive, the copper is.

----------

At these wattages, its clear that larger wires like 6AWG or even 4x 8-pin connectors are too bulky for computer usage. But 12vhpwr adapter might be too small.
 
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I don't think you understand my point.

Go to Home Depot and feel 12 AWG or 16 AWG wire. Its thick, inflexible, bulky and hard to work with. By the time you're talking about 6 AWG wire that's needed to carry 50 Amps safely, its a specialty wire that I don't think you'd see in any common situation.

You might see 6AWG on central home air conditioners or maybe generators. Its very rarely used given how big, and expensive, the copper is.

----------

At these wattages, its clear that larger wires like 6AWG or even 4x 8-pin connectors are too bulky for computer usage. But 12vhpwr adapter might be too small.

Average quality 12vhpwr cable uses 16 AWG wires, and I think they are quite flexible, the bulkiness comes from the fact that it is 12 wires clamped together.

I think a simple scale up of a 6-pin with 10 AWG wires, or 8-pin with 12AWG wires should be Okay.
They have 80-90 total amps capacity in terms of safety, and okay flexibility.
And one wire could at least withstand 20+Amps...

A simple amazon search gives me roughly the same price for 12 AWG and 16 AWG wires, hence cost isn't the problem.
10 AWG costs twice than 16 AWG but is also uses 1/2 number of wires so they costs roughly the same.

One more observation.
Noticed that both the burn and der8auser's hottest wire all come from the nearest pin from PCB

That pin has the shortest 90 degree bridge behind the connector, hence least amount of resistance.


nv2.jpg
 
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According to spec, for 8-pin, the 3 live wires only share maximum load of 13A (150W)
Even 1x 18AWG wire could handle that load.
But it would be a hot wire, and the pin wouldn't be lasting either. Besides, the CPU plugs can go way higher than that. They're rated up to 32 Amps in total.

The nitpicking over slight length differences is just that, nitpicking. The huge measured differences in current and thermals can't be from minor length differences.

It's clearly a faulty connection, and that fault can only be from the plug - The 12VHPWR cable plug. Which is now rectified with the newer 12V-2x6 cable plug.
 
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Or maybe we shouldn't have 600 W GPUs? I know, heresy, but what if...? :rolleyes:
1739347941901.jpeg


Yeah, stretching the power limits, connector limits and such isn't the way to progress. We need more performance for less power without any tricks like MFG.
 
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That's the plug's fault, not the card.
The discussion at hand about monitoring each wire seems to point at exactly the opposite. The cable and plug does not have problems when usage of it is even remotely in spec.
Yeah, stretching the power limits, connector limits and such isn't the way to progress. We need more performance for less power without any tricks like MFG.
That would basically be an 5080. There is no real path to more performance until TSMC has the new process available and/or Nvidia/AMD/Intel is willing to use it. Or, as an alternative, tricks like MFG...

According to spec, for 8-pin, the 3 live wires only share maximum load of 13A (150W)
Even 1x 18AWG wire could handle that load.
And there are three wires in a 8-pin plug to spread the load.
So it is "safe" even in a case of "one wire carries all the load"
Der8auer had 8-pin connectors on PSU side of things. 20A through one of those wires. I wonder if someone will do an actual test again in burning down a card or plugs :)
 
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Average quality 12vhpwr cable uses 16 AWG wires, and I think they are quite flexible, the bulkiness comes from the fact that it is 12 wires clamped together.

I think a simple scale up of a 6-pin with 10 AWG wires, or 8-pin with 12AWG wires should be Okay.
They have 80-90 total amps capacity in terms of safety, and okay flexibility.
And one wire could at least withstand 20+Amps...

A simple amazon search gives me roughly the same price for 12 AWG and 16 AWG wires, hence cost isn't the problem.
10 AWG costs twice than 16 AWG but is also uses 1/2 number of wires so they costs roughly the same.

One more observation.
Noticed that both the burn and der8auser's hottest wire all come from the nearest pin from PCB

That pin has the shortest 90 degree bridge behind the connector, hence least amount of resistance.


View attachment 384459
I'm not an electrician, but based on my limited knowledge, this makes complete sense to me.
 
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Average quality 12vhpwr cable uses 16 AWG wires, and I think they are quite flexible, the bulkiness comes from the fact that it is 12 wires clamped together.
Spec calls for 16AWG as minimum.
 
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The discussion at hand about monitoring each wire seems to point at exactly the opposite. The cable and plug does not have problems when usage of it is even remotely in spec.
The total power is entirely in spec. Only there is an imbalance of currents between all the wires. Given that both ends, the power supply and the card, are a single conductors internally, there isn't any way for the card to be at fault.
 
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The total power is entirely in spec. Only there is an imbalance of currents between all the wires. Given that both ends, the power supply and the card, are a single conductors internally, there isn't any way for the card to be at fault.
How about this:
Can any electrician confirm?
 
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While Nvidia clearly messed up big with lack of monitoring, isn't the actual cause for something like this in either cable or the PSU? As repeatedly said and shown/explained in videos, at least on card side this all goes into one big blob of 12V. The only thing card can do in situation with per wire monitoring is raise alarm when one wire is overloaded and preferably shut the card down.

I think it is quite a simple idea here.
Since Nvidia defined it has to be a "big blob of 12V" electrically.
So the 12 wires in between are completely meaningless.
It should be just 2 wires, 1 live, 1 ground

They might as well just do this with a pair of giant 6 AWG wire:

6AWG.jpg
 
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The total power is entirely in spec. Only there is an imbalance of currents between all the wires. Given that both ends, the power supply and the card, are a single conductors internally, there isn't any way for the card to be at fault.
That is what I meant. If either or both of the ends would not do a single conductor internally thing, there would not be a problem?
Basically, isn't that what Nvidia did initially with 3090s?
 
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I think it is quite a simple idea here.
Since Nvidia defined it has to be a "big blob of 12V" electrically.
So the 12 wires in between are completely meaningless.
It should be just 2 wires, 1 live, 1 ground

They might as well just do this with a pair of giant 6 AWG wire:

View attachment 384462
It still wouldn't help the issue with the connector that you mentioned in post #79.
 
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That is what I meant. If either or both of the ends would not do a single conductor internally thing, there would not be a problem?
Doesn't really matter about what-ifs. The proof is here already. It can only be the cable plug at fault.
 
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It still wouldn't help the issue with the connector that you mentioned in post #79.
It doesn't, I think the 12vhpwr solution is fundamentally flawed.
But at least the thick wires won't melt.
 
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