Bitcoin Forum
November 19, 2024, 10:58:16 AM *
News: Check out the artwork 1Dq created to commemorate this forum's 15th anniversary
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Need help to connect 12 1080ti to 2 EVGA 1600w PSU  (Read 436 times)
philippew (OP)
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 6
Merit: 0


View Profile
July 24, 2017, 09:14:29 PM
Last edit: July 24, 2017, 09:31:10 PM by philippew
 #1

Hi there,

I'm trying to figure out how I can connect all my 12gpus to my 2 1600w PSU. There aren't enough connections and between laying 1 card around or buying one more psu I will have to stay with the card.

Here's what I got for now:

https://image.ibb.co/id9g4k/Captura_de_Tela_2017_07_23_a_s_21_01_32.png

Sata1/PERIF will connect to 1 8pin of the gpu while the other PSU will do the other 8pin using same ports.
Flying Hellfish
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1764
Merit: 1756


Verified Bernie Bro - Feel The Bern!


View Profile
July 24, 2017, 09:34:07 PM
 #2

First thing to do is read this.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2017600.0
Undefined31415
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 336
Merit: 253

Gone phishing...


View Profile WWW
July 25, 2017, 03:57:53 PM
 #3

Quick question, are you planning on using all 12 1080ti cards with one motherboard? That will probably be a huge pain to get running, if it can even be done. 6 of those cards at about 250W each gets you up to about 1500W, cutting it close even with a high-quality 1600W PSU. (I'm hoping that you're only trying to power the cards themselves with these 2 PSUs.) Without more information, I currently can't see this being a stable system, especially when run 24/7.

Additionally, using 2 power supplies on one rig when you're that close to the max rating on each doesn't give you much flexibility or room for error when trying to balance the load evenly to keep both PSUs operational. It also adds another possible point of failure.

Tl;dr: Consider making 2 separate rigs and power each independently. (I still wouldn't trust one 1600W PSU to fully power a rig with 6x 1080ti cards, though.)

           ▀██▄ ▄██▀
            ▐█████▌
           ▄███▀███▄
         ▄████▄  ▀███▄
       ▄███▀ ▀██▄  ▀███▄
     ▄███▀  ▄█████▄  ▀███▄
   ▄███▀  ▄███▀ ▀███▄  ▀███▄
  ███▀  ▄████▌   ▐████▄  ▀███
 ███   ██▀  ██▄ ▄██  ▀██   ███
███   ███  ███   ███  ███   ███
███   ███   ███████   ███   ███
 ███   ███▄▄       ▄▄███   ███
  ███▄   ▀▀█████████▀▀   ▄███
   ▀████▄▄           ▄▄████▀
      ▀▀███████████████▀▀
DeepOnion
███
███
███
███
███
███
███
███
███
███
   Anonymity Guaranteed
   Anonymous and Untraceable
   Guard Your Privacy
      ▄▄██████████▄▄
    ▄███▀▀      ▀▀█▀   ▄▄
   ███▀              ▄███
  ███              ▄███▀   ▄▄
 ███▌  ▄▄▄▄      ▄███▀   ▄███
▐███  ██████   ▄███▀   ▄███▀
███▌ ███  ███▄███▀   ▄███▀
███▌ ███   ████▀   ▄███▀
███▌  ███   █▀   ▄███▀  ███
▐███   ███     ▄███▀   ███
 ███▌   ███  ▄███▀     ███
  ███    ██████▀      ███
   ███▄             ▄███
    ▀███▄▄       ▄▄███▀
      ▀▀███████████▀▀
Set Ready Go
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 273
Merit: 17


View Profile
July 25, 2017, 07:31:47 PM
 #4

You could add a third psu to get some headroom If necessary.
dandreark1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 145
Merit: 100

out here


View Profile
July 25, 2017, 08:14:31 PM
 #5

Buy an extra PSU ..buy some cheap server psu's from parallel miner. Saves a headache trust me. And you're likely to experience problems with powering 12 risers from two psu's as well, regardless risers take almost nothing to power it.. but using the same PSU to power the risers+the ti's gave me issues so be aware..

I split my TI builds into 1200w server psu/a smaller 650w EVGA. I let the evga power the risers mobo and the primary GPU, while the server psu powers the rest of the GPU's.. a lot of trial and error to get it working correctly but she's goin, she's goin..

lmk if you have any questions
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!