EVGA

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID

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Duppex77
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 01:04:05 (permalink)
Marc UK
Mine has finally arrived 


Congratulations

Make sure to give us some feedback on how the card is running. Also how lucky you are with the Gaming max stable core clocks.

Asus X570 Dark Hero, Ryzen 5900x, 32GB Crucial Ballistix 3600mhz, RTX 3090 FE, 500GB Samsung 980 Pro, BX500 Crucial 2TB, Be-quit 500DX, Corsair AX1000, Razer Basilisk U, Asus Scope TKL Deluxe, ASUS PG279QM G-SYNC.
 
** I miss the days when EVGA made great GPU's - GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 HYBRID she was so Sexy *** 
bdogg454
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 07:07:18 (permalink)
Got mine last night. Installed like a breeze. In a 17 r3 with 6820HK. 15,000 firestrike score right out the box stock settings on gpu and cpu.
 
 

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Intel i7 8700k - H115i Aio
Evga 1080ti Sc2 Gaming Hybrid (Aio)
Asus Maximus Hero X (wi-fi) Motherboard
G Skill Trident z-32gb-3000mhz ram (14-14-14-34)
Samsung 960 pro M.2 ssd - HyperX Savage 480ssd
2 1tb 2.5'' HDD - Evga Supernova 850watt P2 psu
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jlp209
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 07:43:10 (permalink)
For those in the U.S. how long after ordering did it take to ship out? Ordered mine the morning of 5/16 and received a tracking number, but it still has not shipped? 

Asus ROG Strix Z390-I / i9 9900K @ 4.8ghz / Noctua NH-U12A / EVGA RTX 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra / 32 gb G.Skill DDR4 3600 ram / Inland Premium 2TB NVMe SSD / WD 4TB SSD / LG 27GN950 4K 144hz monitor / Silverstone SX1000 PSU / Lian Li TU150 ITX case 
sprousa
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 08:06:59 (permalink)
Can you tell me why you cant control the fan speed of the radiator fan?
bdogg454
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 08:16:16 (permalink)
Ordered mine on the 12th at 3:30pm from newegg. Paid 6 bucks for 3-4 day shipping. Got it on the 17th at 2:00pm. From Cali to N.C.

Intel i7 8700k - H115i Aio
Evga 1080ti Sc2 Gaming Hybrid (Aio)
Asus Maximus Hero X (wi-fi) Motherboard
G Skill Trident z-32gb-3000mhz ram (14-14-14-34)
Samsung 960 pro M.2 ssd - HyperX Savage 480ssd
2 1tb 2.5'' HDD - Evga Supernova 850watt P2 psu
Acer Predator 34'' ultra wide monitor
Phanteks Enthoo Pro M Tempered Glass
Iluv2raceit
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 08:33:26 (permalink)
sprousa
Can you tell me why you cant control the fan speed of the radiator fan?


Ultimately, a very poor decision made by the EVGA engineers.  They should have used a PWM (4-pin) fan solution, but instead chose to use a 'backyard special' Frankenstein 2-pin to 3-pin cable; 2-pin portion connects to the radiator fan and the 3-pin end is connected to a Y connector cable off of the graphics card's PCB, which is not visible because it is underneath the graphic card's shroud.  You will have to remove the shroud to access the 3-pin end coming off the Y connector cable.  That Y connector also provides power to the pump I believe (can't remember for sure, but it is providing power to the pump -or- the blower fan).  A lot of complaints about this design flaw.  The only real feasible solution is to replace the stock fan with an aftermarket 3rd party 120mm PWM fan and plug it into the motherboard and create a custom fan curve based.  To fair to EVGA, I had to do this with my MSI Seahawk X GTX1080Ti (hybrid) card as it to came with a non-PWM radiator fan.  I used this method and also chose to use a 2-pin Temp sensor to directly monitor the GPU radiator exhaust temperature.  I then created the custom fan curve based off of those temps at idle and full load.  Works great - both GPU temps and fan noise are kept to a minimum unless I am torture testing/heavy benchmarking the GPU.
 
Here's a link for the 2-pin Temp sensor (your motherboard must have a 2-pin Temp sensor connector in order to use this):
 
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01DDH68CK/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
 
Nexus has recommended a second solution, but is more involved to implement and requires that you buy a special VGA power adapter cable that allows for you to use the PWM fan connector on the graphics card PCB to a 4-pin PWM fan.  The PWM fan connector on the graphics card is NOT like the ones you see on your motherboard, so this is the reason why the special adapter cable is required.  Again, a reminder to use this solution it will require the disassembly of the graphics card's shroud in order to get full access to and replace that 2-pin to 3-pin power cable.  This solution would allow for you to directly control both the blower fan and the radiator fan using a single fan curve.  Here's a link to the special VGA power cable adapter that you can purchase on Amazon.com:
 
https://www.amazon.com/Phobya-PWM-Adapter-VGA-1012042/dp/B01EUZD854/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1495121461&sr=1-4-fkmr0&keywords=graphics+PWM+conversion+cable
 
Good luck with whatever solution you decide to use!
post edited by Iluv2raceit - 2017/05/18 11:36:03
talkischeap
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 09:23:43 (permalink)
b3ka123
Noctua NF-F12-PWM, 1500RPM is good enough for me and it stays pretty quiet :)


While not as quiet the stock EVGA fan cools the hybrid radiator 5 degrees better than that fan. I've tested with two separate of that exact fan model @100%fan speed. 1500rpm just can't compete with 2200rpm. I've thought about ordering a industrial version with higher rpm to test.

Mother Board: EVGA Z97 FTW
CPU: i7 4790k 4.8ghz - EVGA CLC 280mm Closed loop
GPU: EVGA 1080 Ti Founders Edition Hybrid
RAM: Kingston HyperX Savage 16GB 2400MHz DDR3
PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 1300 G2
SSD: Samsung EVO 500gb X2 / Crucial M4 128gb (OS) / PNY 480gb.  HDD: WD Black 2TB
Soundcard: Soundblaster Z / Beyerdynamics DT990 Pro 250ohm
Case: Phanteks Eclipse P400s Tempered Glass
Displays: Acer x34 Predator w/Gsync Dell 27" WQHD 1440p Ultrasharp / Vizio M series 70" 4k TV

talkischeap
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 09:33:18 (permalink)
Iluv2raceit
sprousa
Can you tell me why you cant control the fan speed of the radiator fan?


Ultimately, a very poor decision made by the EVGA engineers.  They should have used a PWM (4-pin) fan solution, but instead chose to use a 'backyard special' Frankenstein 2-pin to 3-pin cable; 2-pin portion connects to the radiator fan and the 3-pin end is connected to a Y connector cable off of the graphics card's PCB, which is not visible because it is underneath the graphic card's shroud.  You will have to remove the shroud to access the 3-pin end coming off the Y connector cable.  That Y connector also provides power to the pump I believe (can't remember for sure, but it is providing power to the pump -or- the blower fan).  A lot of complaints about this design flaw.  The only real feasible solution is to replace the stock fan with an aftermarket 3rd party 120mm PWM fan and plug it into the motherboard and create a custom fan curve based.  To fair to EVGA, I had to do this with my MSI Seahawk X GTX1080Ti (hybrid) card as it to came with a non-PWM radiator fan.  I used this method and also chose to use a 2-pin Temp sensor to directly monitor the GPU radiator exhaust temperature.  I then created the custom fan curve based off of those temps at idle and full load.  Works great - both GPU temps and fan noise are kept to a minimum unless I am torture testing/heavy benchmarking the GPU.
 
NCIX has recommended a second solution, but is more involved to implement and requires that you buy a special VGA power adapter cable that allows for you to use the PWM fan connector on the graphics card PCB to a 4-pin PWM fan.  The PWM fan connector on the graphics card is NOT like the ones you see on your motherboard, so this is the reason why the special adapter cable is required.  Again, a reminder to use this solution it will require the disassembly of the graphics card's shroud in order to get full access to and replace that 2-pin to 3-pin power cable.  Here's a link to the special VGA power cable adapter that you can purchase on Amazon.com:
 
https://www.amazon.com/Phobya-PWM-Adapter-VGA-1012042/dp/B01EUZD854/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1495121461&sr=1-4-fkmr0&keywords=graphics+PWM+conversion+cable
 
Good luck with whatever solution you decide to use!


SC2 is built on the stock Nvidia FE PCB which only has 1 fan controller which is used for the VRM/Memory fan. There isn't another Controller on it to manage the radiator fan/pump which is why they are split off it 2 wire without control since the only other power plug is only for a LED and cannot power anything else

If you wanted control you need to wait for a custom PCB hybrid like a FTW3 hybrid for example. That card that has 3 fan controllers on it and I expect separate control for pump/radiator fan/vrm fan all independent.
post edited by talkischeap - 2017/05/18 09:36:52

Mother Board: EVGA Z97 FTW
CPU: i7 4790k 4.8ghz - EVGA CLC 280mm Closed loop
GPU: EVGA 1080 Ti Founders Edition Hybrid
RAM: Kingston HyperX Savage 16GB 2400MHz DDR3
PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 1300 G2
SSD: Samsung EVO 500gb X2 / Crucial M4 128gb (OS) / PNY 480gb.  HDD: WD Black 2TB
Soundcard: Soundblaster Z / Beyerdynamics DT990 Pro 250ohm
Case: Phanteks Eclipse P400s Tempered Glass
Displays: Acer x34 Predator w/Gsync Dell 27" WQHD 1440p Ultrasharp / Vizio M series 70" 4k TV

Iluv2raceit
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 10:16:19 (permalink)
talkischeap
Iluv2raceit
sprousa
Can you tell me why you cant control the fan speed of the radiator fan?


Ultimately, a very poor decision made by the EVGA engineers.  They should have used a PWM (4-pin) fan solution, but instead chose to use a 'backyard special' Frankenstein 2-pin to 3-pin cable; 2-pin portion connects to the radiator fan and the 3-pin end is connected to a Y connector cable off of the graphics card's PCB, which is not visible because it is underneath the graphic card's shroud.  You will have to remove the shroud to access the 3-pin end coming off the Y connector cable.  That Y connector also provides power to the pump I believe (can't remember for sure, but it is providing power to the pump -or- the blower fan).  A lot of complaints about this design flaw.  The only real feasible solution is to replace the stock fan with an aftermarket 3rd party 120mm PWM fan and plug it into the motherboard and create a custom fan curve based.  To fair to EVGA, I had to do this with my MSI Seahawk X GTX1080Ti (hybrid) card as it to came with a non-PWM radiator fan.  I used this method and also chose to use a 2-pin Temp sensor to directly monitor the GPU radiator exhaust temperature.  I then created the custom fan curve based off of those temps at idle and full load.  Works great - both GPU temps and fan noise are kept to a minimum unless I am torture testing/heavy benchmarking the GPU.
 
NCIX has recommended a second solution, but is more involved to implement and requires that you buy a special VGA power adapter cable that allows for you to use the PWM fan connector on the graphics card PCB to a 4-pin PWM fan.  The PWM fan connector on the graphics card is NOT like the ones you see on your motherboard, so this is the reason why the special adapter cable is required.  Again, a reminder to use this solution it will require the disassembly of the graphics card's shroud in order to get full access to and replace that 2-pin to 3-pin power cable.  Here's a link to the special VGA power cable adapter that you can purchase on Amazon.com:
 
https://www.amazon.com/Phobya-PWM-Adapter-VGA-1012042/dp/B01EUZD854/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1495121461&sr=1-4-fkmr0&keywords=graphics+PWM+conversion+cable
 
Good luck with whatever solution you decide to use!


SC2 is built on the stock Nvidia FE PCB which only has 1 fan controller which is used for the VRM/Memory fan. There isn't another Controller on it to manage the radiator fan/pump which is why they are split off it 2 wire without control since the only other power plug is only for a LED and cannot power anything else

If you wanted control you need to wait for a custom PCB hybrid like a FTW3 hybrid for example. That card that has 3 fan controllers on it and I expect separate control for pump/radiator fan/vrm fan all independent.

Do you have a picture showing this?  I have confirmed that there are in fact two PWM fan headers located on the PCB.  This in theory would allow for one being used by the blower fan to be split off using a Y adapter cable to support two fans while retaining the PWM functionality.  And the SC2 Hybrid card does not use the FE PCB because it has the ICX sensors installed, as well as has a DVI output - the FE card doesn't have either of those.  So maybe, the SC2 Hybrid is an upscale version of the FE, but is NOT the same PCB.  So, we'll have to disagree on that.
 
With regards to controlling the radiator fan, I already resolved that easily
post edited by Iluv2raceit - 2017/05/18 11:29:46
Jawnathin
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 10:58:41 (permalink)
The SC2 is basically the FE board but with ICX sensors. Gamersnexus has a photo of the SC2 (aircooled) taken apart and the PCB, power phases, and components are identical to the FE. Not that it is a bad thing as the FE board is pretty good, but that is what it is.
 
Regarding fan control, I just disconnected the stock fan, added my own SP fans and plugged them into the fan controller on my case. I have three options to choose from compared to stock, nearly silent but a little warmer, same noise level but a little cooler, or louder and much cooler. I tend to run the quiet setting most of the time. Very easy for me to control the fan speeds now. 
Iluv2raceit
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:07:39 (permalink)
Jawnathin
The SC2 is basically the FE board but with ICX sensors. Gamersnexus has a photo of the SC2 (aircooled) taken apart and the PCB, power phases, and components are identical to the FE. Not that it is a bad thing as the FE board is pretty good, but that is what it is.
 
Regarding fan control, I just disconnected the stock fan, added my own SP fans and plugged them into the fan controller on my case. I have three options to choose from compared to stock, nearly silent but a little warmer, same noise level but a little cooler, or louder and much cooler. I tend to run the quiet setting most of the time. Very easy for me to control the fan speeds now. 


Not it's not.  They are two different PCBs and is because of the ICX sensors and DVI port.  The PCB had to be modified to add those - hense, NOT the same PCB.  The SC2 Hybrid and the SC2 use the same PCB.  I do agree with you that the FE and the SC2 are nearly identical, but they are still different PCBs, albeit with only minor differences.
 
Also, IMHO my solution to use a 2-pin Temp sensor and a 3rd party PWM fan plugged into the motherboard and a custom fan made based upon the temperature of the GPU radiator exhaust is better than using an external fan controller
post edited by Iluv2raceit - 2017/05/18 11:18:25
Jawnathin
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:26:37 (permalink)
I looked again and yes, they are not 100% identical. However the SC2 has a lot of similarities with the FE board. There are minor differences but they are largely the same. I believe the SC2 is mild customization of the FE board and not fully custom. I agree with your earlier assessment that its an 'upscale' version of the FE.
 
Here is the FE, SC2, and FTW3 for comparison.
 
SC2 - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/sc2/evga-1080ti-sc2-pcb.jpg
FE - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/gtx-1080-ti-founders-edition-pcb.jpg
FTW3 - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/ftw3/evga-1080ti-ftw3-labeled_1.jpg
 
 
 
 
 
Iluv2raceit
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:31:50 (permalink)
Jawnathin
I looked again and yes, they are not 100% identical. However the SC2 has a lot of similarities with the FE board. There are minor differences but they are largely the same. I believe the SC2 is mild customization of the FE board and not fully custom. I agree with your earlier assessment that its an 'upscale' version of the FE.
 
Here is the FE, SC2, and FTW3 for comparison.
 
SC2 - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/sc2/evga-1080ti-sc2-pcb.jpg
FE - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/gtx-1080-ti-founders-edition-pcb.jpg
FTW3 - http://media.gamersnexus.net/images/media/2017/GPUs/1080-ti/ftw3/evga-1080ti-ftw3-labeled_1.jpg
 
 
 
 
 


Thanks for the response and the links.  I didn't want to get into a fit about the PCBs.  Ultimately, there are multiple workarounds to control the radiator fan that do not require ppl to wait for the FTW Hybrid version.  My particular solution works with both the EVGA SC2 Hybrid and the MSI Seahawk X (hybrid), so there is that
post edited by Iluv2raceit - 2017/05/18 11:34:38
Jawnathin
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:37:12 (permalink)
I also have the option to plug a PWM fan into my motherboard and control it that way too but in my experience the external fan controller has been an ideal solution. I can easily control the temps and noise even mid game without having to adjust a fan curve. I also did not have to buy any additional sensors or cables as my case already had this built in. I'm glad your solution works well for you but I have also been very satisfied with mine. 
 
Iluv2raceit
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:42:33 (permalink)
Jawnathin
I also have the option to plug a PWM fan into my motherboard and control it that way too but in my experience the external fan controller has been an ideal solution. I can easily control the temps and noise even mid game without having to adjust a fan curve. I also did not have to buy any additional sensors or cables as my case already had this built in. I'm glad your solution works well for you but I have also been very satisfied with mine. 
 


I already covered this option and also stated that the use of a 2-pin Temp sensor cable would allow for you to create a much more accurate fan curve that would be based off of the GPU radiator exhaust temperatures.  This is what I did and it works great!  No need to control anything once you have set up the fan curve.  Yes, you can use a 'dumb' fan curve that doesn't adjust accordingly with the rise in GPU temps, but that just leaves you with higher temps.  And we all know that Pascal is highly sensitive to GPU temps and thus GPU clock speeds throttle down (when in GPU Boost mode) whenever things start to go above 65C.  My solution guarantees this does not happen.  I know because I compared the results using your method and using my method.  Mine is better because I maintain better temps and fan noise throughout the range whether I'm just surfing the internet and not doing anything or in a heavy gaming session.
 
But, like you said, you are happy with your solution.  So, that is that.
post edited by Iluv2raceit - 2017/05/18 11:44:53
Jawnathin
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:48:28 (permalink)
Yes, there are multiple ways to control the radiator fan. Depending on what equipment someone already has a certain solution may work better for them. My case has made it very easy for me to control the fan so I went that route and so far the experience has been very positive. I like it as it is pretty hands off, I usually just leave it in the quiet setting and temps are well under control. It is easy to turn up but I haven't needed to other than just to play with it. However if someone doesn't have the equipment already, they have options like yours where they have more control over the temps/noise using a custom fan curve. This requires more work but they can tailor it to what they want to do.
 
Either way, I think they're a big upgrade over the stock fan which runs 100% of the time which got pretty noisy even when the computer was idle.
Jawnathin
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 11:51:56 (permalink)
The temps on my Hybrid are well under 65C even with my silent fan setting :). Its never gotten even close to that even with the power limit raised and overclocked. Good for idle and for gaming!
Duppex77
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 13:38:07 (permalink)
https://eu.evga.com/Products/Product.aspx?pn=11G-P4-6598-KR
 
5 Hybrids now available @EVGA EU Store. Get it fast. 

Asus X570 Dark Hero, Ryzen 5900x, 32GB Crucial Ballistix 3600mhz, RTX 3090 FE, 500GB Samsung 980 Pro, BX500 Crucial 2TB, Be-quit 500DX, Corsair AX1000, Razer Basilisk U, Asus Scope TKL Deluxe, ASUS PG279QM G-SYNC.
 
** I miss the days when EVGA made great GPU's - GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 HYBRID she was so Sexy *** 
MrDoubleU
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/18 15:59:52 (permalink)
Anyone else with this card, what kind of temps are you getting while gaming and idle?
 
I'm in a weird spot right now, as I just changed my case from a phanteks p400s to a phantek enthoo evolv tempered glass.
In my old case, I had the rad as rear exhaust and front rad for cpu cooler as intake, but my gpu rarely got over 50c
Now, in my new, larger case with more fans, I have my gpu rad as intake and yet I'm seeing temps getting into the 50's and even close to, if not over 60c in the same games.
 
It's kinda irritating me... although not bad temps... these do seem to be quite a bit hotter than what many people seem to be reporting as gaming in the 40's.
Next steps would be to replace the stock thermal compound and/or do a push/pull setup for the rad.
 
Oh yeah.. and here's the stranger thing: my idle temps are lower across the board in my new case than my old. So I was expecting game temps to be lower as well, but instead they seem to be significantly higher... it's weird. Using Cam software to monitor temps mainly.
post edited by MrDoubleU - 2017/05/18 16:02:29
b3ka123
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/19 13:44:42 (permalink)
talkischeap
b3ka123
Noctua NF-F12-PWM, 1500RPM is good enough for me and it stays pretty quiet :)


While not as quiet the stock EVGA fan cools the hybrid radiator 5 degrees better than that fan. I've tested with two separate of that exact fan model @100%fan speed. 1500rpm just can't compete with 2200rpm. I've thought about ordering a industrial version with higher rpm to test.



Well, of course 2,2k RPM kept it in better temperatures, but my #1 priority while ordering such card was quietness. I actually run it at 1,2k RPM with Noctua. Idle at 30 degrees, under load 55-60 max with steady boost of 2,000Mhz on core. Pretty damn happy. Pretty interesting stuff about other solutions in this thread, though! :)
emil2424
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/20 11:11:37 (permalink)
EVGA 1080 Ti SC2 Hybrid Tear-Down
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd-BKvUIjEY

 
 

 
edwardsean
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/20 15:25:50 (permalink)
Iluv2raceit
sprousa
Can you tell me why you cant control the fan speed of the radiator fan?


Ultimately, a very poor decision made by the EVGA engineers.  They should have used a PWM (4-pin) fan solution, but instead chose to use a 'backyard special' Frankenstein 2-pin to 3-pin cable; 2-pin portion connects to the radiator fan and the 3-pin end is connected to a Y connector cable off of the graphics card's PCB, which is not visible because it is underneath the graphic card's shroud.  You will have to remove the shroud to access the 3-pin end coming off the Y connector cable.  That Y connector also provides power to the pump I believe (can't remember for sure, but it is providing power to the pump -or- the blower fan).  A lot of complaints about this design flaw.  The only real feasible solution is to replace the stock fan with an aftermarket 3rd party 120mm PWM fan and plug it into the motherboard and create a custom fan curve based.  To fair to EVGA, I had to do this with my MSI Seahawk X GTX1080Ti (hybrid) card as it to came with a non-PWM radiator fan.  I used this method and also chose to use a 2-pin Temp sensor to directly monitor the GPU radiator exhaust temperature.  I then created the custom fan curve based off of those temps at idle and full load.  Works great - both GPU temps and fan noise are kept to a minimum unless I am torture testing/heavy benchmarking the GPU.
 
Here's a link for the 2-pin Temp sensor (your motherboard must have a 2-pin Temp sensor connector in order to use this):
 

 
Nexus has recommended a second solution, but is more involved to implement and requires that you buy a special VGA power adapter cable that allows for you to use the PWM fan connector on the graphics card PCB to a 4-pin PWM fan.  The PWM fan connector on the graphics card is NOT like the ones you see on your motherboard, so this is the reason why the special adapter cable is required.  Again, a reminder to use this solution it will require the disassembly of the graphics card's shroud in order to get full access to and replace that 2-pin to 3-pin power cable.  This solution would allow for you to directly control both the blower fan and the radiator fan using a single fan curve.  Here's a link to the special VGA power cable adapter that you can purchase on Amazon.com:
 

 
Good luck with whatever solution you decide to use!




Hi. Unfortunately, I'm using an eGPU, so I have no access to a motherboard or case. So, Nexus' solution really intrigues me. Can you link me to where we he posts about this? Thanks!
 
b3ka123
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 01:25:17 (permalink)
Any OC recommendations of the owners?
joonrk90
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 02:38:13 (permalink)
Wish I would've been patient enough... When I was on the market for a 1080ti I initially wanted to get the Hybrid, but me being the impatient bastard I am and have been thinking about doing a full hardline custom loop.... I just went with the 1080ti FE and ended up spending about $900~ on watercooling components.
 
After owning a 1070 FTW Hybrid I just couldn't see myself ever using air to cool my graphics card ever again. I loved that 1070, and it was a silicon lottery winner too from what I've been told... The little guy had a more than stable OC @ 2164mhz on the core clock with a +175 offset, and I don't remember the numbers for the memory but I was running a +400 offset. 
Duppex77
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 03:56:24 (permalink)
Finally received mine yeasterday.

Been playing around with it an I can push it to 2000Mhz on the core, I have the best/stable OC results, gaming without crashes at 1970/80Mhz.

GPU Temps stay below 55c full load.

I have mounted the radiator with the Pump facing down as mentioned in a few posts and the noise level are much better than my old 1080 FTW Hybrid.

No bubble sounds.

No coil wine. Even at game menu screens with 500+ FPS.

Luv this card

Totally worth the wait

Asus X570 Dark Hero, Ryzen 5900x, 32GB Crucial Ballistix 3600mhz, RTX 3090 FE, 500GB Samsung 980 Pro, BX500 Crucial 2TB, Be-quit 500DX, Corsair AX1000, Razer Basilisk U, Asus Scope TKL Deluxe, ASUS PG279QM G-SYNC.
 
** I miss the days when EVGA made great GPU's - GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 HYBRID she was so Sexy *** 
emil2424
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 05:48:48 (permalink)

Duppex77
Finally received mine yeasterday.

Congratulations
I still am waiting
post edited by emil2424 - 2017/05/21 05:50:54

 
Duppex77
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 07:06:53 (permalink)
emil2424

Duppex77
Finally received mine yeasterday.

Congratulations
I still am waiting


Don't worry, the wait is an important part of the addiction/fun.

Asus X570 Dark Hero, Ryzen 5900x, 32GB Crucial Ballistix 3600mhz, RTX 3090 FE, 500GB Samsung 980 Pro, BX500 Crucial 2TB, Be-quit 500DX, Corsair AX1000, Razer Basilisk U, Asus Scope TKL Deluxe, ASUS PG279QM G-SYNC.
 
** I miss the days when EVGA made great GPU's - GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 HYBRID she was so Sexy *** 
Marc UK
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 11:34:18 (permalink)
Finally installed my card today.
 
I have replaced the fan with an NZXT AER. The cards dimensions are a perfect fit for what I had planned on my build. 
 

 
 

i7 6900K / MSI X99A Xpower Gaming Titanium / 32GB 3200Mhz Corsair Vengeance LED Quad / EVGA GTX 1080 Ti SC2 Hybrid / EK Predator 240 AIO / EK Supremacy EVO / EVGA Supernova 750 P2 / 500GB Samsung Polaris 960 EVO PCIe NVMe SSD / 2x 500GB Samsung 860 EVO SSD's / Aqua-computer kryo M.2 passive cooler+fan / Phanateks Enthoo Evolv ATX Gunmetal & Tempered Glass / NZXT Hue+ RGB strips / NZXT AER RGB Fans / Acer Predator X34A / Corsair K70 LUX / Corsair MM800 / Logitec MX Master
rjohnson11
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 11:38:37 (permalink)
That looks great Marc. Can you post some more complete pics of your build?

AMD Ryzen 9 7950X,  Corsair Mp700 Pro M.2, 64GB Corsair Dominator Titanium DDR5  X670E Steel Legend, MSI RTX 4090 Associate Code: H5U80QBH6BH0AXF. I am NOT an employee of EVGA

edwardsean
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Re: EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 HYBRID 2017/05/21 11:45:11 (permalink)
Was the fan replacement just for aesthetics or did it improve thermal performance?
 
I tried swapping out the stock fan for a Corsair Mag Lev 120 but it spun really slowly off the lead wire. I rerouted it for power and it spun faster, but the stock fan was still more effective on thermals. I'm wondering if another fan might improve on the standard system. 
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