Message boards : Number crunching : affordable/reliable 1600 watt psu plz.
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Well I had to get my 2 of my computer back up this month, long story, but I basically am going to have money for the most exspensive part of my computer build next month. I was looking at the thermaltake toughpower tp-1500m from superbiz. But am open to suggestions. I just got tired of looking. Take your time, im really looking for a 1600 watt, as if you google thermaltake psu calculator, which is the one i use, and put in my specs with cpu load and capacitor age it gives around 1600 watts. If you dont account for age it gives 1100 watts, but I personally hate when things break. So around 1600 watts for following build; | |
ID: 25500 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You might try an 80+ Platinum certified supply from someone such as Seasonic. The supply you come up with only requires 1100W. If the supply is constructed from reliable components, then I would expect little effects from aging over the life of the supply. | |
ID: 25515 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
If you don't like failures, don't put 4 GTX 570s in a single PC. | |
ID: 25516 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
So you think four 570s will overheat even with all fans unlocked at 100%, cause that was* my plan. I can either do 8150 with four 570s 16x2 8x2, or I can do xeon 1270 with two 570s x8. First would be mainly gpu grid, second mainly rosetta. | |
ID: 25522 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I didn't say that 4 GTX 570s will overheat with their factory made cooling. In worst case they could. My point is that aging is much faster at higher temperatures, so if you are concerned about aging, you should use extra cooling, because your system needs larger than standard radiators to dissipate 1100 watts at lower temperature. If you put 4 dual slot GPU into a single PC, there is no room left between the GPUs, so you can't install larger heatsinks onto the cards, also they will heat each other, and their air intake will be blocked by each other hence they will run hotter. The only solution is to use water to take the heat from the cards outside the PC at lower temperature to slow down aging. | |
ID: 25524 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I saw a picture of where yall had put together a 4 card system on here, its nothing to me to replace a graphics card if one goes out. I had a 4870 1gig go out doing folding, and it was basically time for a new one anyways. I did start looking at amd server processors and think I would have no problem installing everything except im getting mixed internet signals on the case form factors such as extended atx having newer versions out as well as SSI EEB 3.61 with newer. I guess I could buy a single processor atx board, but wheres the fun in that. Im just unfamiliar with these form factor cases and power supplys and theyre not cheap so I would like to build a monster gpu grid computer. I think I will be safe with evga because they have a folding@home link on their main webpage, and folding@home makes my asus which is locked at 85% fan speed run from 90 degrees on gpu grid, to 98 degrees on folding which is a degree over spec. Im giving the asus away to my cousin anyways. | |
ID: 25537 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
There are some products that allow you to use 2 power supplies in the same computer. This could be a good option for you because (2) 1000W PSUs typically cost less than (1) 1500W PSU. In addition, you can draw power from 2 AC circuits. 1 PSU could be dedicated to the computer and 1 GPU and the other one could push power only to the GPU. | |
ID: 25542 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You think this case with some unlocked fans would do the trick? | |
ID: 25544 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You think this case with some unlocked fans would do the trick? It's looking very good. Actually I've modded my Chieftec cases to be something similar. Now they have 2pcs of 12cm fans over the GPUs, and a third one above the RAM modules (over the CPU cooler air intake). | |
ID: 25546 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Bugler, forget about using the GTX500 series for a new, high end multi-card rig, and forget about a 1500W PSU or two 1000W PSU's for that matter. | |
ID: 25549 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Do you think the ram will bottleneck? I know toms hardware was saying they think its a gimmick, but I saw the 3820 with only .2 ghz turbo boost, it was nice but it didnt really save on electricity. If I did spend the extra money I would want some electricity savings. Right now the bulldozers price is well below what it should be for such a powerful cpu. I would just rather run on 8 threads not hyper threaded than 4 ht. Plus the savings. | |
ID: 25559 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Do you think the ram will bottleneck? I know toms hardware was saying they think its a gimmick, but I saw the 3820 with only .2 ghz turbo boost, it was nice but it didnt really save on electricity. If I did spend the extra money I would want some electricity savings. Right now the bulldozers price is well below what it should be for such a powerful cpu. I would just rather run on 8 threads not hyper threaded than 4 ht. Plus the savings. The bulldozer is not a good CPU. It is effectively a 4 core but virtue of it's operation (shared floating point units). They also use more electricity than Intel Cpus, and do not support PCIE 3. In other words they are rubbish for multi-GPU crunching setups. As with many things, spending more money up front will garner you savings down the track. PSU - Corsair AX 1500. Best PSU you can buy, plus 7 year warranty. THough, if you go with Kepler GPUs, you will probably only need either an AX1000 or AX 1200. Work out your maximum power consumption, then add 30% and that is what you need in a power supply. That gives you extra leeway for expansion, allows the PSU to run cooler by not operating at it's maximum. PSU also operates at maximum electrical efficiency in this range as well - 70% load. It should also give you a good long service life for your PSU. X79 (socket 2011) is the way to go if you want to run 3 or 4 GPUs. PCIE 3 bandwidth means no bottlenecks. Yes, the Motherboards and CPUs are much more expensive; they will pay you back by operating at a much higher performance level, with lower electrical consumption that a Bulldozer even could. As for what GPU cards to run; best to wait and see before dropping the $$$$ Kepler (GTX670/680) is in beta testing at the moment (for GPUGrid). If the numbers come good, they will definitly be worth running over 570/580s. Kepler produces less heat and has less electrical consumption than Fermi. | |
ID: 25563 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
see i wasnt sure if amd still used floating point in their processors. I have heard bad things about it. like it means only a certain part of the processor does math. I guess I will start looking at intel then. I really dislike floating point, any other info you wanna share about floating point i would like to hear, thanks. | |
ID: 25567 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
As I posted in another thread, I think it is highly unlikely that if you are running only GPUGrid that RAM will be overloaded even with 4 GPUs - regardless of CPU choice as long as that CPU is not too old. | |
ID: 25575 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Does nvidia support pci 3.0? I read they dont, not sure if its just the chipset or what. I think its all their drivers tho. C602 chipset would be my intel chipset. Also I have bought like 3 xeons online and they all had problems, so im about to buy a new one with sata support, is this like setting up a regular computer cause if you know could save me about 600 dollars. lol. I bought one where the hard drive was bad and my friend said i needed a new pata one, oh well 100 dollars anyways. so im suspicious. Ive built a couple computers tho so im starting to gain confidence 8D | |
ID: 25581 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
NVIDIA does not currently "officially" support PCIe 3.0 on x79. HOWEVER, there is a very easy way to get it working. | |
ID: 25582 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Then there are the GTX690's (combined TDP of 600W) - two of those would keep the running costs well down, and again an 850W PSU should suffice (assuming you don't start overclocking).. Are you saying that 2 690s could be run on a high quality 850? Ken | |
ID: 25587 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You may want to look at using blowers to force air between the cards. Liquid cooling sounds great but it has plenty of other issues. | |
ID: 25588 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Then there are the GTX690's (combined TDP of 600W) - two of those would keep the running costs well down, and again an 850W PSU should suffice (assuming you don't start overclocking).. It would be close, and you definitely could not overclock anything. 600w for the 2 x 690 100w CPU 100w fans/hdds/dvd drives etc 800w total A good 850 w could handle that; you'd probably want to go to a 1000w for a bit of safety or a 1200w if you want to overclock the CPU/GPU | |
ID: 25591 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
[quote]As I posted in another thread, I think it is highly unlikely that if you are running only GPUGrid that RAM will be overloaded even with 4 GPUs - regardless of CPU choice as long as that CPU is not too old. | |
ID: 25592 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
SB-E only has 40 lanes. Only 2 cards can run at x16 at any given time. If you buy a mobo with 3 slots like I did, it's x16,x16, x8. 4 slot mobos usually default to x16, x8, x8,x8. | |
ID: 25595 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
SB-E only has 40 lanes. Only 2 cards can run at x16 at any given time. If you buy a mobo with 3 slots like I did, it's x16,x16, x8. 4 slot mobos usually default to x16, x8, x8,x8. Sorry, I wasn't being clear. I'm assuming he does the registry hack so that PCIE is enabled. Remember that PCIE 3 is twice as fast as PCIE 2. So, the cards would run at PCIE3 x8 (4x8 = 32 lanes used) which is the same as all cards running at PCIE2 x16 As I said earlier, running 2 cards in sli or crunching gains nothing from SB-E however running 3 or more does make use of the extra bandwidth available, and does see performance gains. It's also important that x79 boards are designed to run 4 cards, and have the extra molex connectors for PCIE power that many/most p67 z77 boards don't have. This is really important for crunching. Maxing out the cards without that connector runs a high risk of frying the PCIE slot and/or the 12v line in the 24pin motherboard connector. this[url] http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?279308-Vega-s-*Heavyweight*-display-and-computer-edition-2012&p=5081386&viewfull=1#post5081386[/url] thread has some interesting info/videos on the topic at hand. | |
ID: 25603 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
One other factor to consider in a 1500W PSU if you choose to continue down this path is feeding it. | |
ID: 25948 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Is 1500 watt for the entire outlet? meaning I should only run one extension cord from one wall outlet per 1500 watts. This seems very important to me. I dont mind running extension cords from other places in my house. If the outlets are on the same breaker then its beyond my knowledge anyways. I guess I will end up buying an extension cord with this build. Im starting my intel build with core 2 quad, altho it only has one gpu slot, I want to be sure I can handle the intel build before I spend bigger bucks. I also dont want to melt my sockets as I did by plugging two air conditioners to a strip so if you got some info 2 share 8D | |
ID: 25956 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You say 15 amp wall circuit plug so I assume you mean more than one outlet, directly from the breaker box. Is this the case? I dont really understand my breaker box and just kinda pray I dont start a fire. Can more than one outlet come off the circuit? def buying extension cord. | |
ID: 25957 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You can have many outlets on circuit. In most bedrooms, all of the outlets are on 1 circuit. Bathrooms and kitchens usually have more of a 1 circuit to outlet relationship. With a dedicated 20A circuit, you will have 1 outlet directly connected to a 20A breaker in the box. Using the 80% rule, you could draw 16AMPs on that circuit or (110V * 16AMPs) = 1760 Watts. You can draw more than that, up to a max of 2200 Watts but the breaker would trip at anything greater than 20AMPs. | |
ID: 25958 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
well I found my outlet map, the person who lived here before me made. It has them all except one. One circuit doesnt work, and one has only two prongs. I am interested in how much a two prong can handle. Anyways, I got alot of power now anyways. | |
ID: 25961 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Number crunching : affordable/reliable 1600 watt psu plz.