2016/11/02 17:15:43
veganfanatic
196.75 was a bad driver and ever since I use an OSD when playing games to keep an eye on GPU temperatures, there are other sensors depending on the card
 
my gtx 260s had lots of sensors as the GT200 is over 200W of power required and my cards are overclocked
 
 
2016/11/02 18:30:13
pawelblyskal
Understand that this is the BACK of the card. The actual VRMs on the front must be running 100+c for the BACK of the card to read nearly 90c.
2016/11/02 18:54:49
arestavo
pawelblyskal
Understand that this is the BACK of the card. The actual VRMs on the front must be running 100+c for the BACK of the card to read nearly 90c.




"I took the backplate off of my 1080 ACX 3.0 card to put it under an AIO cooler with a G10 bracket (no heatsinks or thermal pads! NONE). The front AND back plates had to be removed to fit the AIO and bracket on.
 
I used a wireless IR gun to test each of the VRMs front and back while looping Valley at 2202MHz and power and voltage maxed (volts read 1.062 in software fwiw). The back posts of the VRMs  (the solder joints that stick out the back of the PCB) all read about 60C. The front of the VRMs all read about 40C. Just a dinky little Kraken G10 fan blowing on them, and two big (and slow) 220mm fans blowing in from the case's side over the back of the card.
 
Not sure if that means the backplate is trapping all that heat on your card, or if your case doesn't have very good airflow. What I can say is that my 1080 ACX 3.0 (same PCB as the SC and founders) does NOT have that hostspot."
 
 
Nope. Nope. Not even close buddyroo. They run cooler at the front because they have heatsinks and/or better airflow (because of the HSF of the ACX cooler) than the back of the card.
2016/11/02 19:15:43
veganfanatic
my evga card does not come with a back plate but by asus card does have one
both cards have dual fan coolers and are both around 150W or so maxed but in practice most games hardly warm them up
 
 
both cards probably benefitted from the swarm of fan i use, which likely has added to their service life considerably
 
my chassis uses 140mm fans but some higher end boxes now use 200mm and bigger fans
 
2016/11/02 19:19:40
ruhroh
arestavo
pawelblyskal
Understand that this is the BACK of the card. The actual VRMs on the front must be running 100+c for the BACK of the card to read nearly 90c.




"I took the backplate off of my 1080 ACX 3.0 card to put it under an AIO cooler with a G10 bracket (no heatsinks or thermal pads! NONE). The front AND back plates had to be removed to fit the AIO and bracket on.

I used a wireless IR gun to test each of the VRMs front and back while looping Valley at 2202MHz and power and voltage maxed (volts read 1.062 in software fwiw). The back posts of the VRMs  (the solder joints that stick out the back of the PCB) all read about 60C. The front of the VRMs all read about 40C. Just a dinky little Kraken G10 fan blowing on them, and two big (and slow) 220mm fans blowing in from the case's side over the back of the card.

Not sure if that means the backplate is trapping all that heat on your card, or if your case doesn't have very good airflow. What I can say is that my 1080 ACX 3.0 (same PCB as the SC and founders) does NOT have that hostspot."
 
 
Nope. Nope. Not even close buddyroo. They run cooler at the front because they have heatsinks and/or better airflow (because of the HSF of the ACX cooler) than the back of the card.




Wait, aren't you just proving my point that the ACX cooler is terrible?  A "dinky little Kraken G10" absolutely crushes "The World's Most Efficient Air Cooler" [eVGA's words, not mine]    
2016/11/02 19:30:20
arestavo
ruhroh
arestavo
pawelblyskal
Understand that this is the BACK of the card. The actual VRMs on the front must be running 100+c for the BACK of the card to read nearly 90c.




"I took the backplate off of my 1080 ACX 3.0 card to put it under an AIO cooler with a G10 bracket (no heatsinks or thermal pads! NONE). The front AND back plates had to be removed to fit the AIO and bracket on.

I used a wireless IR gun to test each of the VRMs front and back while looping Valley at 2202MHz and power and voltage maxed (volts read 1.062 in software fwiw). The back posts of the VRMs  (the solder joints that stick out the back of the PCB) all read about 60C. The front of the VRMs all read about 40C. Just a dinky little Kraken G10 fan blowing on them, and two big (and slow) 220mm fans blowing in from the case's side over the back of the card.

Not sure if that means the backplate is trapping all that heat on your card, or if your case doesn't have very good airflow. What I can say is that my 1080 ACX 3.0 (same PCB as the SC and founders) does NOT have that hostspot."
 
 
Nope. Nope. Not even close buddyroo. They run cooler at the front because they have heatsinks and/or better airflow (because of the HSF of the ACX cooler) than the back of the card.




Wait, aren't you just proving my point that the ACX cooler is terrible?  A "dinky little Kraken G10" absolutely crushes "The World's Most Efficient Air Cooler" [eVGA's words, not mine]    




Disproving your backwards logic. The front is cooler and NOT hotter.
 
Because there is a fan, or in the case of the ACX cooler, fans blowing over the top of the VRMs. Which is not the case for the back of the card.
2016/11/02 19:41:33
bcavnaugh
ruhroh
LOL this is too rich.  That reddit post is mine, I also cross-posted here.  (can't post link due to my post count but it shouldn't be hard to find)
 
Not 30 minutes after I posted the thread here, bcavnaugh private messaged me: "You Could Have At Lest Posed what the Max Temp is, which I think is 102C You are causing more issue and problems on the Forum doing this, at least that is what I believe."  
 
So let me get this straight bcavnaugh, you believe I'm "causing more issue and problems," yet you are quoting/reproducing my post here?

YES I Do! Their are to many Threads mixing up the two different main issues.
Any yes you are welcome as well.
2016/11/02 20:25:40
ruhroh
 

Disproving your backwards logic. The front is cooler and NOT hotter.
Because there is a fan, or in the case of the ACX cooler, fans blowing over the top of the VRMs. Which is not the case for the back of the card.



No.  I agree with you the front is cooler and not hotter than the back.  My point is that your VRM temps on the back of your card are 60C with a Kraken G10.  I get 80C with the stock ACX.  A lot of people complain that the Kraken G10 ignore VRM cooling but even the Kraken G10 completely outperforms the ACX when cooling VRMs...
2016/11/02 20:30:31
Scarlet-Tech
ruhroh
No.  I agree with you the front is cooler and not hotter than the back.  My point is that your VRM temps on the back of your card are 60C with a Kraken G10.  I get 80C with the stock ACX.  A lot of people complain that the Kraken G10 ignore VRM cooling but even the Kraken G10 completely outperforms the ACX when cooling VRMs...


The fan from the kraken G10 does not have a heatsink and fins directly above it causing an area of resistance.

The fins on the cooler of the ACX will slow air down and need more fan power to push the air through to the vrm heat spreader.

The kraken G10 has nothing obstructing the air to the vrm heat spreader.
2016/11/03 06:12:20
z1nonly
OP, there are two different Black editions with the ACX cooler. (one has a slight overclock and is rated at 170 something TDP and the other has no overclock with a lower 150w TDP. Can you check your part number so that we know what we are looking at here?. I have the slight OC version and I am hoping that your card is like mine. If you have the 150w TDP version, your temps may be good because you are using less power in general.

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