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Thread: Radeon 5970 Overclocking: The VRM Temperature Bottleneck

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    Radeon 5970 Overclocking: The VRM Temperature Bottleneck

    http://www.anandtech.com/weblog/showpost.aspx?i=657

    In our Radeon HD 5970 review, we ran in to some issues when trying to overclock the card to 5870 speeds of 850MHz/1200MHz. At the time this is something we attributed to the VRMs, meanwhile AMD suggested that it was cooling related, and that we should manually increase the fan speed.

    As it turns out, we were both right, we just didn’t have the tools at the time to properly identify and isolate the issue. Late last week we got our hands on a beta version of Everest Ultimate, which added preliminary support for the 5970. With that, we could read and log the voltages and temperatures of the various components of the 5970, and properly isolate the issue.

    From that, we’ve discovered a few interesting things about the 5970. Let’s start things off with the cooler removed from the 5970.



    We’ve gone ahead and circled the VRMs in red. There are 9 altogether; 6 on the right side, and 3 near the left side of the card. We aren’t able to track down what each specific VRM is connected to, but we believe that each GPU is attached to 3, each GPU’s RAM is attached to 1, and finally the PLX PCIe bridge is attached to 1. Regardless, pay attention to the location of these VRMs for later discussion.

    As we previously noted in our 5970 review, when overclocked the card was throttling down in two cases. One was when running OCCT/FurMark, members of AMD’s “power virus” list by virtue of the fact that they put a card under a greater load than AMD believes to be realistically possible. Our 5800 series cards never throttled under these applications, so to see the 5970 throttle here was a bit surprising but not wholly unexpected.



    The second case was using Distributed.net’s pre-release GPU client for use with AMD’s GPUs. Since this is a real program, this was absolutely unexpected, and is what instigated our look in to the matter.

    In both cases, the key was the overall load on the GPU cores, and consequently the amount of power required to drive the GPUs. When a bank of VRMs reached roughly 120C (this being averaged among all the VRMs in that bank), overcurrent protection kicked in and throttling began. In the case of FurMark this was very quick and even at 100% fan speed the cooler could still not keep the VRMs cool enough to allow full-time 850MHz operation. The Dnet client on the other hand was much slower to ramp up, and we ultimately found that 70% fan speed was enough to keep our hottest bank of VRMs below the threshold, stabilizing at 116C.

    Notably, during this whole period the GPU cores themselves stayed at or under 94C, which is still a few degrees below their own throttle point. AMD’s fan quickly ramped up, and in our testing it only needed to go to 59%. So if the cores did get hotter there was still plenty of room to go with the fan.

    This brings us to our first point of concern for the 5970, which is the fan speed. Clearly it’s adequate for the GPU cores themselves, but we cannot find any proof that the fan speed is adjusted based on the temperature of the RAM or the VRMs. If the fan speed were to ramp up in the case of near-critical temperatures in the VRMs, then the Dnet client likely would have ran without an issue the first time, as this would have pushed the fan to 70%.

    We asked AMD about whether the fan speed is affected by VRM temperatures at all, but we didn’t receive a response. This isn’t particularly surprising since post-launch periods are a good time to take a vacation and there’s a holiday this week for their American employees, but it means we couldn’t get a confirmation of our assumption. So for the time being, we’re working on the assumption that only GPU core temperatures drive fan speed.

    It also bears mentioning that the 5970 gets quite a bit louder when the fan goes up to 70%. We went ahead and captured the noise data for it at 70% and 100%, which is in the chart below. At the 70% fan speeds needed to run the Dnet client at 5870 speeds, you’re looking at 70dB, which is quite a bit louder than the fan noise at stock speeds. It is in fact uncomfortably loud by this point.



    Our second point of concern goes beyond just the fan, and is the overall cooling of the VRMs. When we looked at our Everest logs after running the Dnet client, we noticed something interesting with respect to which VRMs were overheating. The VRM bank attached to GPU 1 was some 25C hotter under load, but it wasn’t GPU 1 that was the hottest. GPU 2 was consistently a couple of C warmer. We don’t believe this to be in error, so to understand why this is, we refer back to our disassembled 5970.

    As the fan is on the right, the right side of the heatsink the vapor chamber dumps its heat in to is going to be cooler than the left side by the virtue of the fact that the left side is effectively using the already hot-air of the right side to cool. The heatsink and vapor chamber mitigate this some, but the right side of the card – and consequently the right GPU– should be cooler than the left side. This leads us to believe that GPU 1 is the right GPU, and GPU 2 is the left GPU.

    This is important since if we look at the VRMs, the VRMs feeding GPU 2 sit under the vapor chamber, while the VRMs feeding GPU 1 (along with the RAM and PCIe bridge) are not. We haven’t been able to fully dissect the cooler, but the VRMs on the right side sit right underneath the fan, and we don’t believe there to be a significant heatsink in the metal bar that sits above them. So while the VRMs feeding GPU 2 are being cooled by the vapor chamber, the VRMs feeding GPU 1 are only being cooled by the heat dissipation properties of a metal bar.

    From this, we can conclude that the VRM banks are receiving wildly different amounts of cooling. The VRMs on the right side are not cooled nearly as well as those on the left and as a result the card is being held back by the VRMs on that right side. To that extent, we believe that if all the VRMs received the same level of cooling as the VRMs on the left side, then the card would have no problem maintaining 5870 speeds while running the Dnet client, and likely even FurMark. It’s also worth noting that all the 5800 series cards share the design of placing the VRMs under a metal bar under the fan, but the 5970 seems to suffer more for it compared to the 5800 series.

    Finally, there’s the matter of whether this is even going to matter for most users. After catching the VRMs hitting 120C under the Dnet client, we went looking at other applications and games to see where else the card was throttling. The result of that inquiry was that we couldn’t find anything else that could match the Dnet client in total load. The Dnet client is a bit of a special case here, since crunching encryption keys makes exceedingly good use of the 5-wide SIMD design in the 2000-5000 series cards. When we took a look at something similar to the Dnet client, in this case the Folding@Home GPU client, we couldn’t break 100C. The significance of that result remains to be seen though, since the Folding@Home GPU client hasn’t been optimized for the 5800/5900 series yet like the Dnet client has. Our ultimate concern is that this card is going to repeatedly fall flat on its face at 5870 speeds with more GPGPU applications as OpenCL and DirectCompute take off, and the number of such applications bloom.

    Meanwhile in games it was a similar story. Crysis and the STALKER benchmark are two of the most demanding games we’ve tested on the 5970, and in both cases the VRMs again peaked at near 100C. As games aren’t going to hammer the SIMDs like GPGPU applications do, the power load from games should be lower than for GPGPU applications.

    As far as our opinion on the 5970 is concerned though, this doesn’t change anything. While we’ll buy AMD’s “power virus” rationale for FurMark and OCCT, the Dnet client is not a power virus. It’s a real application, one that AMD even used in their 5800 presentation back in September. Thus as far as we’re concerned, our 5970 is only good for 775MHz, the lowest clock speed where the VRMs stayed under 120C. Granted, AMD will never officially promise that the 5970 can reach 5870 speeds, but based on how the 5970 was promoted and presented the fact of the matter is that the card can’t meet its advertised capabilities – this card is clearly meant for 5870 clockspeeds.

    With that in mind, we’ll end on two thoughts. The first of which is that in spite of our experience, for pure gaming scenarios we don’t have any data to bring in to doubt the idea that the card can run at 5870 speeds without throttling. So long as you only intend to play games, those speeds should be fine.

    Our second thought is that cards from vendors with custom overclocking utilities will be better able to maintain 5870 speeds at all times. These are cherry-picked chips, so there’s no reason why they absolutely need 1.1625v core voltage to run at 850MHz; we suspect that they could do with less. Since voltage is our main enemy here, even a small drop in voltage should have a noticeable impact on VRM temperatures. But you’re going to need a utility with a full suite of voltage options to take advantage of that.
    ATI has been designing their X2 cards cooler like this for what? 3 years? From the beginning people have been telling them that the design results in hot air of one GPU being blown into the other; resulting in one GPU being hotter.

    I find it hilarious that ATI has done this AGAIN with their "top dog" card. I own a GTX 295 and it idles @ 41C and Full loads @75C, if NVIDIA figured out how to cool dual GPU cards so well over a year ago why is ATI still scratching their heads?

    Once again ATI has produced an overly HOT card that can't be used to it's full potential with the stock cooler.
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    I can kind of see where ATI is coming from. 99% of people won't use their 5970 for anything that should stress it to "dangerous" levels.

    By that I more specifically mean most people don't overclock nor run benchmarks on a regular basis.

    It's still stupid that they won't shape up though. I can't imagine it would add THAT much extra cost to improve the cooler and get those VRM's cooled down.

    At this point I'm just gonna wait for Fermi. If Fermi sucks, watercool a 5970. I have a feeling lots of others are thinking the same way.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sly Fox View Post
    I can kind of see where ATI is coming from. 99% of people won't use their 5970 for anything that should stress it to "dangerous" levels.

    By that I more specifically mean most people don't overclock nor run benchmarks on a regular basis.

    It's still stupid that they won't shape up though. I can't imagine it would add THAT much extra cost to get those VRM's cooled down.

    At this point I'm just gonna wait for Fermi. If Fermi sucks, watercool a 5970. I have a feeling lots of others are thinking the same way.
    People who buy the 5970 are obviously enthusiast consumers and most enthusiast are going to OC this card. Now while I agree not everyone is going to run OCCT/Furmark repeatedly, these temp problems will show up in highly stressful games (Crysis/Dirt 2/GRID/etc)
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    some of it is differences between approaches- until nvidia launched the single PCB version of the GTX-295, they had always used 2 PCBs and (im guessing there) a huge slab of copper and al fins with the fan sandwhiched between the two blowing across those fins. whereas ati has always done a single PCB (less need to duplicate everything is my guess) which by nature is a harder beast to cool, unless you're wanting to dump all the heat inside the case (one fan over each core would probably be optimal)
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    hahaha Ledhed still talking about ur 295..i find that hilarious..also i find it hilarious that nvidia still has nothing and is getting crushed by the 5 series while you sit and try to pick it apart..

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    5950 is basically a 1440 version of 5970 but with no cooling on the vrms at all "Based on the orbs shots of 5970 & 5950". Try overclocking that without a 3rd party cooler..
    Coming Soon

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    Quote Originally Posted by InCredible View Post
    hahaha Ledhed still talking about ur 295..i find that hilarious..also i find it hilarious that nvidia still has nothing and is getting crushed by the 5 series while you sit and try to pick it apart..
    I'm talking about the only card that is a Dual GPU card that has been released anywhere near the 5970 release (as in a fair comparison). It's no secret that the 295 cooler works much better, even on the single PCB models.

    Also notice I didn't pick this apart, AnAndTech did.
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    this is old, and im waiting on real games, until then, people need to stop talking about how badly power viruses heat up cards. they also need to remember that this issue was expected, and is why the card throttles instead of getting damaged or crashing.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Manicdan View Post
    this is old, and im waiting on real games, until then, people need to stop talking about how badly power viruses heat up cards. they also need to remember that this issue was expected, and is why the card throttles instead of getting damaged or crashing.
    Haha you think ATI expected a thermal problem with their highest end part and then released it anyway? I don't think so and a card throttling is a reason to RMA it, not praise it.

    Who wants to own a card that has to drop down the stock clock speeds to keep from crashing?
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    Quote Originally Posted by LedHed View Post
    Who wants to own a card that has to drop down the stock clock speeds to keep from crashing?
    for one...I do, I'd rather lose a few FPS when playing a game than crashing (my fun with my old x700Pro comes to mind)
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    Quote Originally Posted by DragoonXX View Post
    for one...I do, I'd rather lose a few FPS when playing a game than crashing (my fun with my old x700Pro comes to mind)
    I would rather have a card that can maintain it's advertised speeds without having to throttle down. I have never heard of people praising a feature that cuts performance drastically. It's not going to be a "few fps", it's going to be almost cut in half if it throttles to low power 3D speeds.
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    I'm sick of people complaining about stock coolers not able to cool their overclocks. Why is it called a stock cooler? cause it cools stock speeds.

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    I'd gladly buy the 5970 and slap some water cooling on it. If I'm gonna buy the fastest card then I might as well water cool it! Who uses stock anyway?>

    Edit: Water might not even be needed. Once Asus and others get their aftermarket coolers on these the VRM heat won't be an issue.
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    Quote Originally Posted by LedHed View Post
    Haha you think ATI expected a thermal problem with their highest end part and then released it anyway? I don't think so and a card throttling is a reason to RMA it, not praise it.

    Who wants to own a card that has to drop down the stock clock speeds to keep from crashing?
    you obviously have not kept up with things

    this is the same design as the 4000 cards, which WORK very well with furmark and OCCT, they get higher FPS than any nvidia card, but its due to 100% of their potential being used. since no game can use every shader perfectly, there is no game that comes close to these. the 4870x2 broke 350W when running under furmark, and is rated for only 270W TDP.

    right now there is NO review showing throttling under any game. until one is shown, try not to imagine anything you believe to be facts.

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    Quote Originally Posted by LedHed View Post
    I would rather have a card that can maintain it's advertised speeds without having to throttle down. I have never heard of people praising a feature that cuts performance drastically. It's not going to be a "few fps", it's going to be almost cut in half if it throttles to low power 3D speeds.
    Almost cut in half is still faster than a 295
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    Quote Originally Posted by trans am View Post
    I'm sick of people complaining about stock coolers not able to cool their overclocks. Why is it called a stock cooler? cause it cools stock speeds.
    Well since almost every card available can run past it's stock speed on the stock cooler why should people expect less from the "fastest GPU in the world"?
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    one thing i still havnt seen, how many FPS does a throttled 5970 get in furmark, compared to a 295?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Manicdan View Post
    right now there is NO review showing throttling under any game. until one is shown, try not to imagine anything you believe to be facts.
    When a card throttles with FurMark you can only assume highly stressful games will produce the same result. FurMark really isn't THAT stressful compared to games like Crysis.

    Now OCCT that is a different story.
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    So in a nutshell a bank of VRMs aren't being adequately cooled and the on-board throttling engages before the VRM have the chance to desolder themselves from the board(slight exaggeration).

    So they need to modify the VRM cooling directly underneath that fan to fix the "problem". Sounds like these cards could really benefit from a full-cover waterblock.

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    Quote Originally Posted by [XC] gomeler View Post
    So in a nutshell a bank of VRMs aren't being adequately cooled and the on-board throttling engages before the VRM have the chance to desolder themselves from the board(slight exaggeration).

    So they need to modify the VRM cooling directly underneath that fan to fix the "problem". Sounds like these cards could really benefit from a full-cover waterblock.
    oh definitely, full coverage water blocks will basically let these cards stretch their legs out and fly.
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  21. #21
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    U all have valid points ....

    When buying top notch hardware the last thing you want is a clock down of memory + core when overheating

    Does anyone remmber Prescots and TRM1 and CE1 ?

    The entire point of this state, is to save the card from permant damage. Ovbiously aftermarket coolers and fans will help.

    I also dont think anygame out their would throttle the card, FurMark is a continues 100% computation. I dont think a game could use 100% on all core at all times.
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    Quote Originally Posted by ibby View Post
    I also dont think anygame out their would throttle the card, FurMark is a continues 100% computation. I dont think a game could use 100% on all core at all times.
    if Furmark is using 100% of the card, then how does OCCT produce temperatures 5-10C hotter than Furmark?
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  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by LedHed View Post
    if Furmark is using 100% of the card, then how does OCCT produce temperatures 5-10C hotter than Furmark?
    but does the game throttle ?
    can you provide stastics ?
    RIP GrandDad , I'll miss you -15/07/1985
    RIP GrandMother, I'll miss you -08/08/2007

    Dave is the man!

  24. #24
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    1,463
    This article is lame. For every Legit, Anand, and HWC horror story there are 15 other overclocks reaching 1ghz. He doesnt know which gpu is which, or which group of vrms powers which gpu. He doesnt even know how many vrms are on the pcb. I'm going to say that even with all this misinformation, he probably has bad contact with components -> heatsink.

    Even so, Ati should have done a better job engineering the cooling of the VRMs anyway. I love Anandtech, and the article's author Ryan is correct about VRMs getting too hot, but makes a lot of mistakes in his notions.

    I would probably lap the vapor chamber contacts; shim, re-tim, and re-pad the contacts with all other components, and finally file the screw receivers refit the cooler more snug. All this or go with a custom waterblock. Customers shouldn't have to do this, and it should be precisely taken care of in the factory and shipped this way.

    Embarrassing for ati to design a cool 400watt vapor chamber with poor VRM contact, full exhaust with triple outputs, and a newly redesigned liquid filled multi- ball bearing fan that rattles and has QC issues, and hastily slap it all together resulting in shipping parts being overclocking lemons here and there.
    Bring... bring the amber lamps.
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  25. #25
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    1,176
    The 5970 is one of those magical cards which (outside of WR atempts) will never need overclocking

    It fracking destroys any game on stock, absolutely demolishes all on stock and by the time a game comes out which could possibly tax a 5970 ..the card will be irrelevant

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