|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|
#101 | |
|
Quote:
In fact the HD7970 non-GHZ measures less than the GTX570. Avg Load/Peak Load/Max Load (FurMark) GTX570 is 166/190/298 HD7970 is 163/189/270 HD7970 GHZ is 209/238/273 And some people buy OCed GTX570 for their Mac Pros...
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) Last edited by lixuelai; Dec 13, 2012 at 09:43 AM. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#102 | |
|
Quote:
Still wouldn't be a great long-term evaluation and wouldn't really provide any solid reference. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#103 | |
|
Quote:
Everyone knows that there are tolerances built into the system, and some amount of overhead over the rated 75W, but this is generally where the risk vs. reward question comes in -- do you feel confident enough that you can pull double the current through that connection on the motherboard, or not? Many people take the safer side and go with the external PSU option. Some people might even just use a converter cable and risk it. I think one of the biggest objections to the positions taken in this thread is simply the recommendation that it's totally fine and everyone should just use the converter cable. There have been many new posters on these boards asking for help with upgrading their GPU, now that it's relatively easy to just drop a standard PC card from either NVIDIA or AMD into the Mac Pro. I certainly haven't feel comfortable telling people like this that they can ignore the PCIe power spec and run a 300W card without any problems. I've never said that it might not work, but revelstudios seems to have some pretty detailed information and some of us are interested in finding out more details about it. |
||
|
|
1
|
|
|
#104 | |
|
Quote:
I guess my next question is this: Apple has been shipping Power Mac and Mac Pro systems with 2 6-pin connectors since 2003 (Power Mac G5) and 2006 (Mac Pro). This is 4-5 years before the introduction of the new 8-pin connector in 2008. Given how stagnant the design has been, do we think that they'd update their motherboard design for say the 2009 model? I don't know, which is why I've been asking for more details about the technical specs that revelstudios has been quoting. Regarding your questions, this is exactly what I've been asking for. revelstudios has quoted some very specific numbers. I'd like to understand where those numbers came from. I'll admit, I was initially offended and my posting quality suffered, but I'm over it and am genuinely trying to learn more about this. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#105 | |
|
Quote:
Now as to PSU on the Mac Pro. The G5 uses a totally different one so not even going to touch on it. The 2006-2007 uses a Delta 980w PSU. The 2008-current also uses a Delta 980w PSU, however it is a different part number and referred to as v2. Now I don't know what the difference between the two are, but it likely has to do with the PCI-Express 2.0 specifications. edit: The newer Mac Pro PSUs seem to have more amps on the +12v.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) Last edited by lixuelai; Dec 13, 2012 at 01:04 PM. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#106 |
|
1. Is every single person who tries a 7xxx card in 10.8.3 drivers going to start their own new thread titled "I too confirm that it works". Isn't it usually best to put a post in the OP post? Unless of course you need more attention than most.
2. Until someone comes up with hard facts beyond those known, using a 6 to 8 pin is like plugging all your Christmas lights into a single outlet with hard wired cube taps. It'll probably work, but who knows? And if and when it stops working, the smell of smoke will be in the air and it will be too late for something. The GPU? The logic board? The PSU? If you like that hint of danger, that thrill of GAMBLING, the whiff of burned electronics, GO FOR IT !!!! FWIW, I got a 7950, it is nearly as fast as 7970 and works with 2 @ 6 pins. Argument over. I guess I just need to start my own new personal "I too can re-confirm that my own previous discovery was correct" thread. Maybe I'll even make arrogant, "I know better than you guys" sorts of statements with nebulous, unproven claims so I get more responses. |
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
#107 | |
|
Quote:
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#108 |
|
|
0
|
|
|
#109 |
|
I closed the page and am too lazy to find it again since it is a moot point anyway. The ability of the PSU to handle the +12v amps was never in question. It is how much the motherboard can withstand that is in question.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#110 | |
|
Quote:
So your view is that AMD included 8 pin connector entirely, 100% as decoration? OK, that kind of follows OPs logic. 7950 has 2 @ 6 pins, I guess AMD didn't think it needed as much finery. I am merely pointing out that for people who want a 7xxx card with GPU horsepower with absolutely 0% (ZERO) risk of trace failure, the 7950 is a win/win. The people who ruin their logic boards rarely come and proudly post about their stupidity. If you dig deep enough in Cindori's posts, I think you will see that he burned one up doing some GPU buggery/pokery. Most of the time, it would be fine. But if 1/1000 will blow up in a year, then it is irresponsible of people who have 10,000 (totally ballpark) or more readers to recommend something if that could lead to 10 blown logic boards. |
||
|
|
2
|
|
|
#111 | |
|
Quote:
__________________
What is Other on my HDD? Upgrading to Mountain Lion? Check out my free iBook with video tutorials on iTunes 2012 iMac comparison chart |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#112 | |
|
Quote:
Anyway nowhere did I claim it is 100% decoration. However that is probably closer to the truth than you think. it is ironic that there are HD7970 GHZ editions that uses 2x 8 pins and HD7950s with 1x 6pin + 1x 8pin. Must need all that juice! I am not going to argue against the HD7950 being a good choice. After all it is and better bang for the buck. However just because the HD7970 has 1x6 pin + 1x8 pin doesn't mean your chance of frying your traces are higher than say the GTX570 with 2x 6 pin. Now if everyone also complained about the GTX570 drawing 300w max then it would be a different story. True, but my reply was to a post that made no mention of HD7970 GHZ but 6 to 8 pin in general.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) Last edited by lixuelai; Dec 13, 2012 at 02:22 PM. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#113 | ||
|
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
What is Other on my HDD? Upgrading to Mountain Lion? Check out my free iBook with video tutorials on iTunes 2012 iMac comparison chart |
|||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#114 | ||
|
Excellent thread evolution. Now it's more interesting than OP
Quote:
But as lixuelai said, it's not a problem here. Quote:
IDK where to find answers for Q.1&2. Schematics of MP backplane board aren't so common in the web. Looking on backplane board itself won't help I'm afraid, because AFAIK there are few layers of traces on modern boards. We only see 2 outer layers. |
|||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#115 | |
|
Quote:
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#116 |
|
This will be my last post in this one.
I can state with absolute certainty that at least 200+ people are running GTX570s in their Mac Pros and not ONE has had trouble with traces burning. If AMD has choosen to spend extra $$$ putting plugs on theirs cards just to create that image that they are bigger power hogs then they actually are, great marketing idea !!!! As has been pointed out at least 10 times already, using a 6 to 8 pin adapter makes far more sense when there is a nice fat wire coming from a $75 power supply to the GPU. Not such a good idea when the "wire" is a strip of metal of varying width that is thin like a sheet of paper and is running through a $1000 Logic Board. But if burning up $1K is the same as burning up $75 to you, good for you. It all boils down to driving 85 in a 65. Yes, you can do it for years and never get a ticket. And yet somehow, there is always some poor sap sitting at the side of the road signing for theirs. But hey, keep going 85 and keep taking your chances. Just don't tell everyone that driving 85 is a good idea because they won't ever get a ticket. |
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
#117 |
|
Right, as discussed earlier, it's a PC card and not specifically designed for the Mac Pro. Every PC I've seen has a direct cable connection from the PSU to the GPU, rather than running through traces on the motherboard. This whole discussion revolves around whether those traces can handle more than the rated 75W for a standard 6-pin PCIe connection.
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#118 | |
|
Quote:
Great! Now we can logically conclude that a card with near identical power usage aka the HD7970 should have no issues running in a Mac Pro via 6 pin to 8 pin.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
||
|
|
1
|
|
|
#119 | |
|
Quote:
Here's a link from 2009, for example: http://www.geeks3d.com/20090916/furm...s-intentional/ So, that means: - 570 is rated for 219W but can pull 300W with FurMark (+81W over TDP). - 7970 GHz Edition is rated for 275W. - Assuming a similar amount of overdraw, that could put the 7970 GHz Edition at 275 + 80 = 355W while running FurMark, assuming the driver isn't manually throttling the card. So, that could very well mean the card pulls 130W more than the Mac Pro can handle, if the 6-pin connections really are only designed for 75W. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#120 | |
|
Quote:
Source: techpowerup, one of the few sites that measure card power consumption, not overall system.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#121 |
|
Right, because the AMD Windows driver is throttling the card when FurMark is detected. Are you sure the same protections are in place on the Mac side? FurMark was only just released for the Mac, right?
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#122 |
|
Revelstudios, why don't you simply download FurMark and measue the power draw?
I've been following this thread all the time and I must say I'm quite amused. I am one the guys that own a MVC GTX570, I've been playing Battlefield 3 for about 10h straight (lol, LAN party) while the card had 99% usage, and my Mac still works :P I must say, if revelstudios likes to have a 7970, why don't you simply let him? Although I have a heard time understanding his calculations... |
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#123 |
|
AMD hasn't throttled Furmark via drivers for years. If there is any throttling done it is done by the card itself. I believe AMD has a fancy name for it which I cannot remember.
__________________
MacBook Pro Retina 15, 2.3Ghz i7, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HP LP3065 iPod Nano 4th Gen 8GB, iPad Mini 16GB, iPhone 5 16GB (VZ) |
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#124 | |
|
Quote:
Here is an example of the 7950 that you said has absolutely 0% (ZERO) chance of trace failure with 1x 6 pin and 1x 8 pin. So you're saying that the Sapphire 7950 will cause trace failure because it has one 8 pin connector, but this XFX 7950 with a higher core clock won't because it's 2x 6pin?? |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#125 | |
|
Quote:
---------- The OP is of course free to run whatever he likes. My questions have simply revolved around his assertion that the power draw was not an issue, particularly given my (and many others') understanding of what the Mac Pro can provide via the 6-pin connectors on the motherboard. |
||
|
|
0
|
![]() |
|
| Tags |
| 7970, mac pro, radeon |
«
Previous Thread
|
Next Thread
»
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:10 AM.









Linear Mode
