Well, not all of them
See http://nx.i4memory.com/reviewimages/.../dfix58_v1.jpg
What do you see?
Well, not all of them
See http://nx.i4memory.com/reviewimages/.../dfix58_v1.jpg
What do you see?
Yeah.. it's also my favourite of all X58's TBH. The classified may OC higher, but what you get for your money with the DFI UT is awesome.
The proper way to do the mod is to add it to the board (either to the PCI-E slots directly or the backside of the 24pin ATX connector). Adding the current capacity to the 24pin connector of the PSU will limit you to the electrical efficiency of the pins which connect the PSU to the motherboard.
Ever seen a burned molex connector?
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
I have a 759 Classified and I'm planning on getting a few nv300s when they come out. But I was wondering if I don't do this mod will my board melt down? I thought this board could handle three to four way sli? I mean why the F did I pay 5 bills for this board? Feel kind of let down by Evga here if this is true?
Not only that I'm hearing reports on the Evga forums that the latest 191.07 drivers and win 7 is burning out the pci-e lanes for some people. Maybe Evga should come out with a 24 pin adapter that goes in between the plug and the psu with supplemented grounding and power without having to solder your board? I'm not good with soldering.
This news bites it hard!
Motherboard: EVGA Classified 759
CPU: Intel 920 D0 2.66 @ 3.8ghz
Ram: 6gb 1600 DDR3 7-7-7-20 Corsair Dominators
PSU: PC Power Cooling 1200 ESA
Audio: SB X-Fi Titanium
Video: Trifire XFX 6970
Harddrives: WD3000HLFSx2+ OCZ 120G Vertex SSD
Cooling: HK 3.0 - XPSC360 Rad - MCP655 pump
Motherboard: EVGA Classified 759
CPU: Intel 920 D0 2.66 @ 3.8ghz
Ram: 6gb 1600 DDR3 7-7-7-20 Corsair Dominators
PSU: PC Power Cooling 1200 ESA
Audio: SB X-Fi Titanium
Video: Trifire XFX 6970
Harddrives: WD3000HLFSx2+ OCZ 120G Vertex SSD
Cooling: HK 3.0 - XPSC360 Rad - MCP655 pump
Seems like when designing it they would have put molex connectors on the board next to the PCIE slots for the slots...
I read the thread and from what I can gather the problem is that the Classified 759 has a power problem with more than 2 cards. You say doesn't affect nvidia cards but from what I've read on the Evga forums that isn't necesarily true. What's going to happen when nv300 comes out? I just would like someone to say don't worry not a real issue. It's kind of upsetting news.
Motherboard: EVGA Classified 759
CPU: Intel 920 D0 2.66 @ 3.8ghz
Ram: 6gb 1600 DDR3 7-7-7-20 Corsair Dominators
PSU: PC Power Cooling 1200 ESA
Audio: SB X-Fi Titanium
Video: Trifire XFX 6970
Harddrives: WD3000HLFSx2+ OCZ 120G Vertex SSD
Cooling: HK 3.0 - XPSC360 Rad - MCP655 pump
It is because when you run with 4 ait cards they draw to much amp tru the atx connector så the 12v wires vil get warm an maybe short circut
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Motherboard: EVGA Classified 759
CPU: Intel 920 D0 2.66 @ 3.8ghz
Ram: 6gb 1600 DDR3 7-7-7-20 Corsair Dominators
PSU: PC Power Cooling 1200 ESA
Audio: SB X-Fi Titanium
Video: Trifire XFX 6970
Harddrives: WD3000HLFSx2+ OCZ 120G Vertex SSD
Cooling: HK 3.0 - XPSC360 Rad - MCP655 pump
I'm sorry but I don't believe it. Just because it hasn't happened yet doesn't mean it won't eventually. I've studied the power consumption of both nVidia and Ati cards and most of the time nVidia cards suck more juice though I'm not sure about through the pci-e slot. What I do know is that there have been reports about Win 7 cranking up the power consumption through the video cards more than before and that some people with the 759 Classified and the latest 191.07 WHQL nvidia drivers have done near permanent damage to their motherboards. Though I'm only speculating and have no concrete evidence of what is going nor has it happened to me, I just would like to have all the facts before I plug away three - four video cards. Hopefully the next generation of 40nm nv300 cards will be more power efficient. Until then I'm going to play it safe.
Thanks.
Motherboard: EVGA Classified 759
CPU: Intel 920 D0 2.66 @ 3.8ghz
Ram: 6gb 1600 DDR3 7-7-7-20 Corsair Dominators
PSU: PC Power Cooling 1200 ESA
Audio: SB X-Fi Titanium
Video: Trifire XFX 6970
Harddrives: WD3000HLFSx2+ OCZ 120G Vertex SSD
Cooling: HK 3.0 - XPSC360 Rad - MCP655 pump
i7 920 D0 @ 4.7+HT | Classified E760 | 2 x GTX 480 | 3 x 2GB DDR2000 GSkill Trident 9-9-9-24
Heatkiller 3.0 Acetal CPU Block + 2x Swiftec MCW60 + 4x120 BIX Rad | 2x 128GB C300 SSDs
Burned pins is an issue with the connector, not the board.
Thats not to say adding the mod wont help the board of course.
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
That doesn't make sense really. Because I've been running this board and PSU combination for MONTHS with no issue. Suddenly when two high power draw GPUs get attached, pins start melting... I don't think it's a 'connector issue'. If it were, then I'd have had melting pins long ago, either with the two 5870s or with the 5870/5970 combination it handled before.
The power draw is way out of the connector spec, which is a power management issue between the mobo and GPU (where are the two pulling their power from).
i7 920 D0 @ 4.7+HT | Classified E760 | 2 x GTX 480 | 3 x 2GB DDR2000 GSkill Trident 9-9-9-24
Heatkiller 3.0 Acetal CPU Block + 2x Swiftec MCW60 + 4x120 BIX Rad | 2x 128GB C300 SSDs
You added more power draw through the pins by adding the high power GPU's. The pins have an effective contact area and pressure. If you draw too much power through the (rather poor) connection then heat builds up due to resistance and poor contact area/pressure.
If you had that problem in the board (which is what this thread is about) it would be catching fire or burning traces rather than pins.
You know what I wish PC's (motherboards, video cards, PSU's) had? Screw type terminals like this, or like you find on a lot of car audio amplifiers:
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
I actually did something similar years back when they'd just started adding external power supplies to some agp boards - my card at the time didn't have one and would occasionally fall over due to burning a pin or two in the AGP slot - I drilled in from the side behind the problem contacts using an endmill in a dremel (flat end to help prevent drilling through the contact itself), and then tapped them all for allen headed grub screws - seemed to prevent the burning problem, and you can add more power by bringing a feed from a molex down over the grubscrew with a ring terminal and securing with a nut. (or just use a normal bolt/cap head instead of a grubscrew, but I didn't have one handy).
If it's only a couple of traces like mine was then thumbscrews/old mobo standoffs would be faster for fitting/removing the card.
Those with better soldering kit than my clunky old 30w soldering iron with an end the size of your thumb could probably solder straight to the pin?
Last edited by Rippthrough; 07-29-2010 at 07:32 AM.
So this is not from the same problem?? http://www.evga.com/forums/tm.aspx?m=536713 The man was using 3 480s i believe.
Running now, http://www.evga.com/forums/tm.aspx?m=693435
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no, its a poor connection at the 24pin connector. It is not a problem of the PSU not able to provide enough power or the board not able to transport the power through its power plane to the PCI-E slots.
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
So basically you are saying that the 24 pin connector was never designed to handle this amount of power draw on the 12v lines?
Is that why more modern tri and quad gpu (7+ slots) boards have now come out with extra molex connectors and specifically saying in the product description that the reason they have added extra molex connections is for high end multi gpu setups.
I know for sure that problem isn't restricted to EVGA products, Asus products like the P6T7 have the same problem with melting 24pin connectors.
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basically
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
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