So....cut costs on the adapter, and charge more for the card. Yea, that's not corporate greed rearing its ugly head or anything. F*** you, nVidia.
That's why I want all these 40x0 cards to sit on the shelves. To teach nVidia and scalpers a valuable lesson not to take your market for granted. Burning down your prospective buyer's house is not a way to endear them to future purchases.
The AMD GPUs, don't even draw 400Ws, you can use the PSU you haveAMD has already stated they're not going to use that crappy connector on the 7000 series gpu's. But that may also permit be sure to potentially lower TGP. We'll have to wait and see.
Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk
Ask Jensen if you can hook your rig up to Selene and then you will be the best gamer in the world. Then you will be a Rockstar.yup, they're gonna have to step up performance real fast, real quick if they want any chance of taking a piece of the pie away from amd/nvidia and step up their drivers too. But i hope they succeed, it can only be good for competition/pricing with the other 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIKjZ1djp8c
https://www.reddit.com/r/nvidia/comments/ymq9x5/native_atx_30_connector_meltedburnt_msi_mpg_a1000g/
https://www.reddit.com/r/nvidia/comments/ydh1mh/16_pins_adapter_megathread/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/hkepc/permalink/1584427595338026/
Not even ATX 3.0 native PCIE 5.0 direct cables to 12VHPWR are safe from the meltdown @RedFox 1!Code:https://www.reddit.com/r/nvidia/comments/ymq9x5/native_atx_30_connector_meltedburnt_msi_mpg_a1000g/ https://www.reddit.com/r/nvidia/comments/ydh1mh/16_pins_adapter_megathread/ https://www.facebook.com/groups/hkepc/permalink/1584427595338026/
I personally think all they have to do is stop soldering the connector wires and start crimping them and the heat issue would be a moot point.
My source at Nvidia is changing his stories day to day. I have to say I honestly do not know, he is sending a crimped connector, his exact words to me were that solder is very heat sensitive and crimping is the way they will continue into the future, if the solder melts we have issues, a good crimp is much better, they are developing a tool now for a highheat passthrough.Perhaps, but this does seem to indicate that your statement (and i wish it was true) of "Just use an ATX 3.0 PSU and you'll be safe", is now out the window