Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Apparently You Need To Connect Seperate Power Rails For The 5700XT.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Apparently You Need To Connect Seperate Power Rails For The 5700XT.

    So a nice chap on Reddit, out of nowhere says "Hey Guys, if you're suffering from instability with the 5700XT, be sure to have separate power rails for the 8 and 6 pin. Don't daisy chain them".

    Me:


    Me Now:


    Seriously AMD, all the damn issues people had and this was the problem? Get the word out bro's. I feel stupid for thinking that an 850 Watt Gold PSU would be handle the draw on the same rail.

    I will test and find out if I still get that random crash once in a while.

    #2
    Isn't that a long-standing recommendation for power hungrier cards?

    Comment


      #3
      Probably, but yours truly forgot and I can't imagine how many newbies probably didn't know. The Reddit thread is like a mass of coming to Jesus moments with an army of people smacking their heads.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Mangler View Post
        Isn't that a long-standing recommendation for power hungrier cards?
        for any card with more then one PSU connection.

        My PSU manual itself says not to do this.
        Quotes:

        Rage3d is the BEST forum!! There are alot of smart people on here!! -phexus

        Comment


          #5
          This has always been the case when using a PSU with a Multi-Rail setup. Single Rail not so much but its always recommended to use separate cables.

          The reason for this on Multi-Rail setups depending on how the rails are divided, each rail won't have enough amps to power the GPU separately. The biggest offender was the 295x2 from AMD. Only two multi-rail PSU's supported it, Eneramx EVO and a EVGA Supernova because you couldn't get the AMP's required per rail otherwise.

          This doesn't just go for AMD either, Nvidia as well. If your GPU is using 2 PCIE power connectors or like on the 3080 FE requires an adapter that takes two 8pins. Use 2 separate cables.
          Intel Core i9 10900K @ 5.2GHz, Asus Maximus XII Apex, GSkill Trident-Z Royal DDR4 3200MHz 32GB CAS11, Asus Strix 3080Ti OC, Creative Labs SXFI Theater, Samsung 970 Evo Plus 1TB, Corsair AXI 1500i PSU, ThermalTake View 71, Corsair K95 Platinum RGB, Corsair Dark Core RGB SE, Acer Predator X34, Windows 10 Professional X64

          Comment


            #6
            I bet you anything this has been the lion share of people's complaints with crashes with the RX 5700XT.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by AllexxisF1 View Post
              I bet you anything this has been the lion share of people's complaints with crashes with the RX 5700XT.
              Of course, it's always easier to blame AMD/Nvidia for driver issues, or faulty hardware rather than admit it's user error, or that it could possibly something else.
              I speak my mind! if you can't handle that, you might want to leave, because **** is going to get real!!

              ~I had the right to remain silent, I just didn't have the ability. ~ Ron White
              ~You can't fix Stupid! ~ Ron White
              ~There's not a pill you can take; there's not a class you can go to. - ~Stupid is forever. ~ Ron White
              ~Life is a hard teacher, it gives you the test before it teaches you the lesson.
              ~It's never to late to have a good childhood! The older you are, the better the toys! ~ My Dad
              ~Live everyday as though it is your last, it can all end at any moment!

              Comment


                #8
                In theory even if you have a single rail PSU having two wires should result in less resistance, since overall you have twice as much wiring carrying the same current. Whether that actually makes a difference in practice, I don't know, but I usually make it a practice to simply connect two separate lines. At a minimum it can't hurt anything to have two separate vs a single.

                Comment

                Working...
                X