DarkMatter
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2007
- Messages
- 1,714 (0.27/day)
Processor | Intel C2Q Q6600 @ Stock (for now) |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus P5Q-E |
Cooling | Proc: Scythe Mine, Graphics: Zalman VF900 Cu |
Memory | 4 GB (2x2GB) DDR2 Corsair Dominator 1066Mhz 5-5-5-15 |
Video Card(s) | GigaByte 8800GT Stock Clocks: 700Mhz Core, 1700 Shader, 1940 Memory |
Storage | 74 GB WD Raptor 10000rpm, 2x250 GB Seagate Raid 0 |
Display(s) | HP p1130, 21" Trinitron |
Case | Antec p180 |
Audio Device(s) | Creative X-Fi PLatinum |
Power Supply | 700W FSP Group 85% Efficiency |
Software | Windows XP |
You just proved our point there. The 4850/70 cards are known to idle high, but their chip design can handle sustained temperatures much higher than that - almost 30 degrees centigrade higher, to be precise, which is a large difference. I understand that might *seem* unsettling at first glance, but really it has no need to be.
That is a very good point, and naturally some people will be unlucky and get cards that are less able to tolerate the heat - but that's an unfortunate fact of life, and is the same for all areas of the consumer electronics industry. The RMA figures show that there's not an unreasonable number of problem cards.
My friends cards started artifacting at over 110ºC, a temperature that was reached in an eye blink.
The RMA figures show nothing as they do not represent a big enough base.
If the card tests as fine at their centre, then it might indicate a problem at your end causing artifacts - not necessarily one that's your fault, either, there are a lot of variables to deal with. It could be a problem peculiar to your own configuration. Temperature being high but still within specifications is not a good enough reason for an RMA, though - if you don't like the card idling high, then you can always change the cooler. And any skew to the RMA figures resulting from consumer reluctance will apply to the competition, too, so it still proves nothing about the scale of this problem.
Of course the "problem" is in our end. Namely ambient temperature higher than 15-20ºC, and the fact that we don't have the closed antiseptic test environments as they have. Nor we use testbeds, but cases that will make airflow worse no matter how good it is. It's our fault? Of course NOT. They have to make cards to work everywhere and from what I've seen the REFERENCE HD48xx cards can't be used everywhere without problems. That's all that I'm saying all the time. Non-reference cards have no problems, but why should average joe buy an aftermarket cooler if he bought a reference card?
Haha, thanks for the heads-up
I've said my piece now though, I think I can probably leave it at that.
Never!!