- Joined
- May 28, 2020
- Messages
- 752 (0.45/day)
System Name | Main PC |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 5950X |
Motherboard | ASUS X570 Crosshair VIII Hero (Wi-Fi) |
Cooling | EKWB X570 VIII Hero Monoblock, 2x XD5, Heatkiller IV SB block for chipset,Alphacool 3090 Strix block |
Memory | 4x16GB 3200-14-14-14-34 G.Skill Trident RGB (OC: 3600-14-14-14-28) |
Video Card(s) | ASUS RTX 3090 Strix OC |
Storage | 500GB+500GB SSD RAID0, Fusion IoDrive2 1.2TB, Huawei HSSD 2TB, 11TB on server used for steam |
Display(s) | Dell LG CX48 (custom res: 3840x1620@120Hz) + Acer XB271HU 2560x1440@144Hz |
Case | Corsair 1000D |
Audio Device(s) | Sennheiser HD599, Blue Yeti |
Power Supply | Corsair RM1000i |
Mouse | Logitech G502 Lightspeed |
Keyboard | Corsair Strafe RGB MK2 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 20H2 |
The day that'll happen is the day we'll see GPUs rated in kilowatts. We'd need a new electrical system as most electrical installations in houses is capped at 230V/10A in Europe or 120V/16A in North America, which works out to 2300W and 1920W respectively, per course. If a card is drawing 1.2kW, then the rest of the PC is probably drawing close to 1.6 (300W CPU, plus some loss due to inefficiency in the PSU and other power draw from SSD/HDDs, fans, LEDs, etc.), which is only 320W off the limit of the breaker. Guidelines say to never exceed 80% usage on a single course, and that number is already 75W over. So when we start seeing 1.2kW cards we'd also probably need to get bigger courses, atleast in North America.I can see next gen cards needing 2x12 pin now
Not to mention the hard limit of 5nm as it seems quantum tunneling is a major barrier to go denser than that in the consumer space and still be able to turn a profit. With 5nm being the barrier, the only way to get anywhere close to 600W+ would be MCM.
Rumors are the FE cards will ship with the required adapter to use 3x 8pin PCIe connectors. So no need for a new PSU or new PSU cable just yet. If we are to believe the rumors, at least.Nvidia might as well bundle in the required power supply with Nvidia branding on the power supply, and as a bonus the required 12 pin cable.
Rumors indicate they are, and it'll only be for the FE cards. AIB cards will still use traditional PCIe power connectors.Looking at the inflated prices of RTX3000, one would think that nvidia can afford to include these cables with the GPUs.
More likely 3x 8pin, as dual 8pin is only capable of 300W, which these cards are rumored to exceed at stock. Hence the new 12pin connector being able to go upto 600W.At the end of the day, the power consumption of the cards isn't the point of the connector. As long as I can easily use the 12 pin without buying a new PSU (for example, can I use a 8+8 on one cable and convert that to the 12 pin?) I'm fine with it.