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Other => CPU/GPU Bitcoin mining hardware => Topic started by: frograven on March 18, 2012, 07:36:19 AM



Title: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: frograven on March 18, 2012, 07:36:19 AM

I've been mining for a few days with a second hand Radeon 5770 I got from Ebay to mess about with - with my electricity rates I'm strictly in break even territory, but it's been interesting.

Anyway my 5770 just stopped working - system just went off while I was using it.
Now the system won't boot, the system will start, fans (both system and Radeon) will spin up for a fraction of a second on power up then the whole PC will shut down.

PC runs fine using onboard graphics.

OS is Xubuntu, I've been overclocking a lot using "aticonfig", was running the system a bit hot for a few days (95c), but the last few days its been cooler and I've been running more stably (until it went splat), typically overclocked to 945.

PSU is a 430 watt Seasonic, but I was pulling about 220W at maximum work so I dont think I was overdoing it there.

The obvious thing is I've just overdone it with a cheap second hand video card - are such failures to be expected with 2 year old video cards being overclocked? Anyway, it was fun while it was lasted - but am I courting failure with ebay 2nd hand cards? Or or should I just not overclock them.

No smoke, smell or obviously damaged components on the board. Cooling was OK (had a few extra fans going).





Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: legolouman on March 18, 2012, 07:45:11 AM
I had a 5750 of mine do that. I did the same thing, over clocked it, and ran it hotish, with the fan high. My fan died not that long ago.

Did you check your fan? I'm willing to bet that the bearings went.

If it isn't the fan, then a VRM or something bad fried.



Running at 95 degrees is easy to do on a mid range card like that, the coolers aren't sufficient to the power they have. The Rule of thumb I've chosen to live by: Don't push the cards past 80 Degrees C.

You probably killed it.

Thanks to hongus for noticing that I missed the 95C temp.


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: hongus on March 18, 2012, 07:55:57 AM
I don't think 95c is a very safe temp to run at, especially because you were OCing pretty hard. Not all eBay cards are bad, maybe you just had bad luck with one. If you're not good at fixing cards you can resell it on ebay or on these forums as a broken card, it won't go for as much but theres always someone willing to buy it.


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: legolouman on March 18, 2012, 08:07:42 AM
I don't think 95c is a very safe temp to run at, especially because you were OCing pretty hard. Not all eBay cards are bad, maybe you just had bad luck with one. If you're not good at fixing cards you can resell it on ebay or on these forums as a broken card, it won't go for as much but theres always someone willing to buy it.

Oh my, that entirely slipped by me as I was reading it. I must edit my post to reflect that.


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: frograven on March 18, 2012, 08:26:53 AM

Running at 95 degrees is easy to do on a mid range card like that, the coolers aren't sufficient to the power they have. The Rule of thumb I've chosen to live by: Don't push the cards past 80 Degrees C.

You probably killed it.

Thanks to hongus for noticing that I missed the 95C temp.

I was running it about 95 for a few days, then backed it down and it was wandering around in the low to mid 80s. But it also may have got much hotter for short periods while I was fiddling with it all.
Still that was quite interesting... and when I wasn't mining it was nice to have something that was OK for games (compared to what I'm used to). Now to keep an eye on ebay again, with my new found knowledge.




Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: rjk on March 18, 2012, 12:36:29 PM

Running at 95 degrees is easy to do on a mid range card like that, the coolers aren't sufficient to the power they have. The Rule of thumb I've chosen to live by: Don't push the cards past 80 Degrees C.

You probably killed it.

Thanks to hongus for noticing that I missed the 95C temp.

I was running it about 95 for a few days, then backed it down and it was wandering around in the low to mid 80s. But it also may have got much hotter for short periods while I was fiddling with it all.
Still that was quite interesting... and when I wasn't mining it was nice to have something that was OK for games (compared to what I'm used to). Now to keep an eye on ebay again, with my new found knowledge.



Does the system boot if you just remove the card? It is unusual for a card failure to kill the entire system. Still sounds PSU-ish to me.


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: frograven on March 18, 2012, 09:41:28 PM

Does the system boot if you just remove the card? It is unusual for a card failure to kill the entire system. Still sounds PSU-ish to me.

yes, system is fine without the card. I will try the card in another PC when available  to eliminate the PSU as the problem.

 


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: silverbox on March 19, 2012, 03:43:16 PM
95C!!  When my cards get to 75C I downclock/reduce workload or add fans :)


Title: Re: apparently dead 5770 - newby casual mining fun
Post by: frograven on March 22, 2012, 02:55:06 PM
well I got back on the horse and purchased another 5770.. in fact I got 2 as the guy was selling both cheaper than one... and back mining at a conservative 71deg c..

When my 9MART pcie-x1 to x16 adapter arrives I'll upgrade my PSU and try this dual graphics card stuff.