Time for some photos!
This is the card.
Since my motherboard has only PCI-E x8 slots, I had put a PCI-E x8 to x16 adaptor/riser. It wasn't necessary to remove it from the card, so I left it there.
Front connectors: DVI, HDMI, VGA.
Only one 6-pin power supply connector.
Back of the PCB. The cooler is secured with only 4 screws around the GPU. By the way, I think the HDMI connector is just for show, I don't see any traces for it on the PCB. I connected a monitor with an HDMI cable to check, and it didn't work. Only the DVI & VGA connectors work.
Let's see some more angles.
The cooler/heatsink is attached only on the GPU, the ram chips and everything else have no heatsink at all. I hope the air from the fans can cool them sufficiently.
As you can see the fans are wired together, they used heat-shrink tubes to cover the wires. I don't like how it looks, seems unprofessional.
Finally! Let's remove the cooler!
Some grey thermal paste was used, the heatsink was attached only on the GPU, everything else had no heatsink at all. I wonder if the card can survive like that. Well, I guess I won't be using my Phobya thermal pads after all.
A closer look of the back of the cooler.
The RAM chips are Hynix, H5RS1H23MFR-N0C.
And last but not least, the GPU!
It has the following written on it:
NVIDIA
39N3FA 0839B1
A TAIWAN
PB0920.03V
What kind of GPU is this? Does anybody know?
The cloth I used to clean the GPU was terrible, definitely not lint-free. I cleaned it up better afterwards.
For now, I have reattached the cooler and put the card back in the pc (this is the only card I currently have, for it).
The idle temperature with the stock thermal paste was 53 Celsius, and now with the Arctic Ceramique 2 is 50 Celsius, not a very big difference, I guess the stock thermal paste wasn't very bad.
Bookmarks