SparkyJJO,
Maybe your reference Visiontek has a revised bios with a higher OCP trigger?
SparkyJJO,
Maybe your reference Visiontek has a revised bios with a higher OCP trigger?
You were not supposed to see this.
The Cardboard Master Crunch with us, the XS WCG team
Intel Core i7 2600k @ 4.5GHz, 16GB DDR3-1600, Radeon 7950 @ 1000/1250, Win 10 Pro x64
Simulated errors on the 3d app by scrambling the reference image in the 3d test. Here is the result :
See the error count ?
Everything is fine there. The error count is not there to count the number of crash of your card, but the number of computing errors your card produced. Just as any other stability checker.
Last edited by Tetedeiench; 05-20-2009 at 12:27 PM.
I m pretty sure mine are both non reference.
My powercolor/gecube 4870 looks like this
gecube
and this is the sapphire one i have
sapphire
I used complexity 3 on it, fullscreen, but i heard my fans kick up to 100% instantly. Not sure if i want to run it again, as I dont want to hear a popping sound in one of my cards, cant afford to replace them at the moment ^^. I think both these cards are 4 phase though.
Just tried to get the volt readings via riva. Might be because i m on windows 7.. but i dont get the option for any Voltage readings.. just fanspeeds and temps. Riva says the Volterra regulators are only on the reference design, so mine must both not be reference.
Last edited by villa1n; 05-20-2009 at 01:21 PM.
" Business is Binary, your either a 1 or a 0, alive or dead." - Gary Winston ^^
Asus rampage III formula,i7 980xm, H70, Silverstone Ft02, Gigabyte Windforce 580 GTX SLI, Corsair AX1200, intel x-25m 160gb, 2 x OCZ vertex 2 180gb, hp zr30w, 12gb corsair vengeance
Rig 2
i7 980x ,h70, Antec Lanboy Air, Samsung md230x3 ,Saphhire 6970 Xfired, Antec ax1200w, x-25m 160gb, 2 x OCZ vertex 2 180gb,12gb Corsair Vengence MSI Big Bang Xpower
I wonder if we should start talking about 3-phase and 4-phase VRMs at that point
We had a sapphire that could withstand the test, and it is indeed equipped with a 4-phase VRM. I even have a video of that :
http://www.snapdrive.net/files/235474/P1030851.avi
52°C to 100°C in 13 seconds![]()
Might be the very same card as yours. 4 phase VRM indeed. Here is a pic of the card VRM, pried apart : 4 phase.
![]()
I beg to differ, I blame the test rig.
A while back I found that ASUS 4850s simply would not work on P43 (P5QL-Pro & P43 Neo) motherboards. Other brands were fine in the same systems. The ASUS cards worked fine in other systems.
Yesterday I found the same with XFX 4850 1GB on 790FX DDR2 boards (K9A2 Platinum, DFI 790FX M2RSH, M3A78T. Likewise, swapping them out for Powercolor cards did the trick and the XFX cards tested fine on a different platform.
The failure mode is the same as you described.
In other systems with the same failure mode increasing the PCIe bus voltage to 1.6V can help.
So I'm thinking that it is the PCI-E slot that cannot deliver the power asked of it or detects over-current condition and shuts down the graphics card on certain platforms.
Also cards from certain vendors don't work properly with certain brands of memory, I seem to remember OC'd 8800GTS512 cards failing repeatedly with certain brands of cheap DDR2, change the brand of RAM or GPU and it would work fine.
Since you don't mention changes to CPU, RAM or motherboard or list the test platform(s) you used it is possible that part of the test platform is the problem. If it repeats with all reference 48x0 cards at stock clocks on every current platform then you might be on to something, but then you need to vary driver versions operating systems and your own OCCT build. Basically you need to expand your test matrix before you can jump to your conclusions.How many cards are affected ?
Right now, we've successfully crashed about 10 different cards using this test, using alot of different power supplies (ranging from 550W Antec to 1500W ToughPower (!!!). We had Seasonic, Corsairs... etc).
BTW it's my job to stress test systems based on pretty much all the current platforms with most available graphics cards, does that qualify me as a hardware guru?
Last edited by initialised; 05-20-2009 at 02:08 PM.
Intel i7 920 C0 @ 3.67GHz
ASUS 6T Deluxe
Powercolor 7970 @ 1050/1475
12GB GSkill Ripjaws
Antec 850W TruePower Quattro
50" Full HD PDP
Red Cosmos 1000
What mod is needed to raise the OCP limit on a 4890? Is it the same as for the 4870? If nobody else wants to test that I will when I get my new card.
we had alot of different configurations, from i7 configs to AMD configs showing the problem. Brands were Asus, Gigabyte, MSI (i'm taking this list from memory). So i'd say that unless they all messed up implementing the PCI-E specs, and we are onto something else.
That's still something possible though. I'd think it unlikely, but possible.
But if your hypothesis is true, how come the VRM-overpowered cards (4-phase) are running flawlessly ? That doesn't make any sense if the problem comes from the PCI-E port. No ? Those cards could go up to 108A... how come others are limited to 82A ?
Bravo TetedeienchI've grown quite fond of your OCCT. Don't let the fanboys and shills shout you down.
I've been told that GDDR5 stuff is power hungry, could be your 512MB card draws less than a 1024MB reference design card and doesn't trigger OCP.
Or a manufacturing problem. Nonetheless /agree wholeheartedly
Nah, here is the sort of thing that would deter me from buying Radeons:
"Your limited testing is flawed. If the VDDC's overheat they will shut down the card to protect it. If you dont want to have a crash when testing artificial means such as this stability benchmark then increase the fan speed to cool the VDDC's. Obviously underclocking acomplishes a similar goal as they dont get as hot. No games are affected just artificial stability tests."
I was considering a 4890 however I won't abide this kind of BS and censorship. I certainly won't encourage such with my hard earned $.
This has been a very revealing thread. I've learned a lot about individuals that compose the XS community![]()
OCZ, where life-time warranty means until we're out of stock!
Sooo... the Nvidia cards perform worse than the AMD/ATi cards?
Doesn't the AMD/ATi card also outperform the Nvidia cards in Furmark?
So how is this not a power virus?
You create an app that creates an unrealistic load on the card, causes the card to draw an unrealistic amount of power and then blame the card?
Last edited by LordEC911; 05-20-2009 at 02:05 PM.
Originally Posted by motown_steve
Every genocide that was committed during the 20th century has been preceded by the disarmament of the target population. Once the government outlaws your guns your life becomes a luxury afforded to you by the state. You become a tool to benefit the state. Should you cease to benefit the state or even worse become an annoyance or even a hindrance to the state then your life becomes more trouble than it is worth.
Once the government outlaws your guns your life is forfeit. You're already dead, it's just a question of when they are going to get around to you.
Does anyone know how many phases the visiontek 512MB 4870 has? I really don't feel like pulling the sinks tubes and sinks off my 4870 to find out.
The Cardboard Master Crunch with us, the XS WCG team
Intel Core i7 2600k @ 4.5GHz, 16GB DDR3-1600, Radeon 7950 @ 1000/1250, Win 10 Pro x64
Lets see how long this one lasts...heh
http://forums.amd.com/game/messagevi...&enterthread=y
EDIT: Gone all ready, I was polite as one can get and they still deleted my question. WTF
EDIT 2: Oh, they banned me to. what BS
Last edited by G0ldBr1ck; 05-20-2009 at 04:32 PM.
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
You can tell by look at the backside of the card. If the marked caps are missing it's 3 phase, if they are there it's 4 phase.
Yep.
A downclocked HD4890 (850/850) keeps >80FPS constant:
(OCCT doesn't support temps monitoring on HD4800s so the second line is 5V)
You were not supposed to see this.
ran for 5 minutes on an original reference 4870 1gb (visiontek or HiS i forgot) with the latest win7 drivers. I stopped after 5 minutes because it didn't look like it was going to implode but i didn't like not being able to see the vddc temps while fullscreened.
card is watercooled (not a FC block) while the mem and VDDC are passively cooled with mildly modified iandh sinks. i cool both my cpu and gpu on the same loop with a single 240 radiator.
room = 25C
card clocks= stock
gpu idle = 40C
VDDC idle = 55, 57, 56C
gpu max =48C
VDDC max =136, 141, 137C
all temps were pretty normalized at this point. i've never had my vddc temps go that high before (furmark only put them up to 109 or so after 10 minutes and while gaming they never get anywhere even close to that) but this is an exceptionally warm day.
i don't really see how this is new or special. its the same issue furmark causes just more so.
Last edited by ryan92084; 05-20-2009 at 02:47 PM.
Maybe when the VRM's hit the amperage limit the card tries to increase power draw from the PCIe resulting in an over-current condition and shuts down the port, that still puts the alleged fault with the card not the board. Overvolting the PCIe bus might get around this on some systems.
Try using the three data points makes a line in two dimensional space approach to formulate a test:
3 3-phase cards from 3 vendors
3 4-phase cards from 3 vendors
3 different X58 boards
3 different Dragon boards
3 different P45 DDR3 boards
3 different sets of DDR3 RAM
3 different OSes Win-7, Vista, XP
3 different DX9 builds
Test each card on each platform with each set of RAM with a fresh install of each OS and each DX9 build. If the 3-Phase cards all fail and all the 4-Phase cards all pass in all configurations. Then you can be fairly sure that the 3-Phase cards are incompatible with your test.
Then the question becomes 'is it your test software, DirectX or the cards that is at fault?'
If you rewrite the test from scratch in OpenGL or DX10(.1) will the fault still occur?
Does data from GPU-z corroborate what you have found with RivaTuner?
Does data from multi-meters corroborate with software monitoring apps?
I'm not saying that your findings are wrong, I doubt that they are but convincing ATi and their board partners that 3-Phase power is not enough for will probably take the level of scientific rigour I've proposed above.
Even then is it relevant if there are no commercial (let alone AAA) games that are capable of stressing the hardware to this level while retaining playable framerates?
Intel i7 920 C0 @ 3.67GHz
ASUS 6T Deluxe
Powercolor 7970 @ 1050/1475
12GB GSkill Ripjaws
Antec 850W TruePower Quattro
50" Full HD PDP
Red Cosmos 1000
Fff.....I ran my HD 4890 oc'ed to 1.033 vGpu 1.39V in OCCT without any problems. You guys probably are undervolting the pcie slots or using crappy psus.
--lapped Q9650 #L828A446 @ 4.608, 1.45V bios, 1.425V load.
-- NH-D14 2x Delta AFB1212SHE push/pull and 110 cfm fan -- Coollaboratory Liquid PRO
-- Gigabyte EP45-UD3P ( F10 ) - G.Skill 4x2Gb 9600 PI @ 1221 5-5-5-15, PL8, 2.1V
- GTX 480 ( 875/1750/928)
- HAF 932 - Antec TPQ 1200 -- Crucial C300 128Gbboot --
Primary Monitor - Samsung T260
The way I see is like buying a brand new 600 HP Sports car, only to find out find out when you plant the pedal to the floor, the fuel pump can't pump enough gas to the engine, and then the engine dies/loses power. Realistically you will NEVER need all 600 of that HP in normal driving, so would you then claim that nothing is wrong with your car's design because you will never really need to go wide open? That the engine died just because you pushed the gas pedal to far down then it ever normally would, even though the company that built the car lets the pedal go that far down in the first place? I don't think anyone would say there was not a problem with their car.
This is the way I am seeing it.
Yes the test is entirely un realistic, but the fact that it can still "over load" part of the card is not good. AMD and Intel release specs for their CPUs that the voltage regulation of a motherboard has to have the ability to meet a certain current value for their most power hungry CPU that could potentially use said socket. Apparently ATI does not.
Last edited by [XC] Lead Head; 05-20-2009 at 03:21 PM.
Fold for XS!
You know you want to
I have to say that Slovnaft gave a very good answer on this matter. He explained very well how the inductor properties are changing with current and temperature.
This is one of the most plauzible explanation of the phenomenon.
An inductor of 3 phase vrm is faced to much more heat and power in time than 4 phase vrm.
Also i have to congratulate Tetedeiench for his work in general, not particulary for this discovery.
But in the end i would say that this problem should concern the videocard makers that in the future should give more importance to the vrm and stop building cheap ones.
HD4870&HD4890 are very good video cards and wont present problems in any game or app, years from now.
Last edited by nr4; 05-20-2009 at 10:17 PM.
Would be nice if op could provide more evidence
He so far tested 2(?) HD 4870 cards and one of them was defective (?)
All this without any serious pics or any screenshots of the tests etc...besides the rivatuner shot of HD 48xx series.
Heck, op probably has an overvolted hd 4850 that he is tearing to bits with this new test of his.
Multiple HD 4870 owners in this thread tried his test and their cards passed.
Has op even posted proof that he actually owns a HD 4870?
Last edited by LiquidReactor; 05-20-2009 at 03:40 PM.
--lapped Q9650 #L828A446 @ 4.608, 1.45V bios, 1.425V load.
-- NH-D14 2x Delta AFB1212SHE push/pull and 110 cfm fan -- Coollaboratory Liquid PRO
-- Gigabyte EP45-UD3P ( F10 ) - G.Skill 4x2Gb 9600 PI @ 1221 5-5-5-15, PL8, 2.1V
- GTX 480 ( 875/1750/928)
- HAF 932 - Antec TPQ 1200 -- Crucial C300 128Gbboot --
Primary Monitor - Samsung T260
guys. it's inductor saturation, cmon. rv770 and 790 are pretty hot chips, volterra pwm is an incredibly hot solution to begin with, and heat reduces Isat threshold. I mean, it fits all the symptoms.
@Tetedeiench, can you try monitoring the surface temp. and inductance of the inductors as this 'phenomenon' occurs?
Get Out!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_virus "A power virus is a malicious computer program that executes specific machine code in order to reach the maximum CPU power dissipation (thermal energy output for the central processing unit). Computer cooling apparatus are designed to dissipate power up to the Thermal Design Power, rather than maximum power, and a power virus could cause the system to overheat; if it does not have logic to stop the processor, this may cause permanent damage."
OCCT is not malicious code.
The wiki entry even makes a distinction between a power virus and a stability program in that a stability program is directly under user control. And OCCT is.
It has not been proven that this causes the GPU to overheat, rather what people suspect is that OCP is being reached, or degradation of an inductor has occurred shutting down the graphics card. Thereby heat is not the main issue.
^^ this is the hypothesis under question though more broadly it is why this has ocurred.
You have not contributed a single piece of data, nor have you augmented the hypothesis and analyzed the results. Your only conclusion is that this is caused by temperature(because you cited power virus), which is wrong.
You're useless, and blatantly lying so you're absolutely worthless. Destroying you is fun.![]()
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