Thanks man! Your my hero of the day :up:
I think Asus got one reference pcb and one for the top models which we got :)
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QUOTE : CL3P20 Hmm..do you have a DMM to see if the resistors are connected, I cannot make out the paths visually from the pics, and have sold my 4850's. The R685 is just adjacent to the location the other users mod'd from..they could be connected..
The resistor R 685 and R 1687 and not connected ... so my question is what is hte resistor i need to shade ? R685 or r 1687 ?? Can any1 check my links with pictures to confim whats the resistor you need to shade on the stock PCB ?
On other tutorial you can shade like here to get more voltage on the gpu
http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/17/123odw.jpg
IS the place you need to shade R650 like in this picture ?
http://img815.imageshack.us/img815/1626/r650.jpg
On my VGA i have the r650 resistor (is the resistor ) not a free space , should i shade that ?? Il appreciate any ideas and Help ! Thanks
I got a Powercolor 4850 1GB and it has a version of the uP6201BQ that doesn't have a mod. The writing underneath uP6201BQ is VLP 86H.
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/f...k/49b48f9e.jpg
DavyGT, nothing is different. FB pin is still pin #13. Trace it and find a good soldering point. Measure default FB->GND resistance and You'll have Vmod.
I already found pin 13 but how do I trace it?
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/f...T/b200a39c.jpg
No, that's #6. See one post above Your previous post here. There is FB marked with green.
EDIT: should be this trace:
http://ceemic.pri.ee/hardware/all/up6201.jpg
That pic is not that good, so I can be wrong. You can confirm it with DMM.
Hi guys!
I have a problem understanding the layout of my non-reference ASUS 4850. It is ssame as this one.
Ceemic, you suggest to measure vGPU on the capacitors:
http://i8.fastpic.ru/thumb/2010/0725...3f94eb4da.jpeg
But the voltage I measure between the positive and negative leads of the capacitor is about 0.1V higher than it should be. Even more so, the voltage between the pos and neg leads of the cap is significantly different from the voltage between pos lead of the cap and ground wire of the molex connector.
And I can tell for sure (judging by the temperature and OC) the voltage I've measured isn't vGPU. Where can I find the right voltage?
Thanks in advance.
P.S. I've checked my DMM, it's error doesn't exceed 1% when measuring 1.3V
DavyGT. If resistance between FB pin and that point on that SMD cap is 0ohm, then yes, they are connected and You can use that spot for soldering. Now measure resistance between FB and GND.
@lex, why do You measure Vgpu between cap legs? Ofc You have to use a proper GND.
I have measured resistance between 3 PCIE Ground Pins and a screw holding the cooler.
2 of the PCIE Ground pins and the screw shows a resistance of 3.86 Ohms on the 20k scale.
The last PCIE Ground Pin gets nothing.
Also, I have found that capacity to connected to 2 resistors. Does that count as a pencil mod?
Edit: How do I find the VGPU read points?
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/f...T/92d1fe5d.jpg
ceemic, thanks, my bad. I was absolutely sure the other leg has to be ground. But still, readings between the positive leg of cap and the ground from PSU are too high. Where can I find proper ground on the PCB?
DavyGT, then You can use 100k ohm VR.
It depends to what these resistors are connected. I never use pencil-mods and don't recommend it.
For Vgpu You can use PWM cap legs for example. Similar to: http://ceemic.pri.ee/hardware/hd4850..._mod01_mon.jpg
Do a layout pic so we can suggest the best place for measuring.
@lex, there is no difference between molex GND or GND near IC; maybe ~0,005V.
I don't have a series of capacitors on my card. All my card's capacitors are near the PWM.
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/f...T/8a415f3f.jpg
@lex, why it can't be 1,25V? Sounds pretty ok. Sadly I don't remember my different HD4850's def Vgpus.
DavyGT, try these:
http://ceemic.pri.ee/hardware/all/hd4850_measure.jpg
@lex, my Asus HD4850 was also very bad clocker. It's probably due to the custom PCB/PWM...
ceemic, thanks for info! I'll try to swap my card for reference, then.
@ceemic
I have a short circuit but OCP is not disable :(
http://i220.photobucket.com/albums/d...5388_OCP_m.jpg