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Author Topic: Burnt PSU Connector?  (Read 1129 times)
destruct (OP)
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Alexander KOSTIN | GoldMint


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June 09, 2013, 11:09:27 PM
Last edit: August 08, 2017, 07:12:48 PM by destruct
 #1

Hello,

I'm wondering if any other miners have had this happen to them.. On 2 of my motherboards I've had the 24 pin connector melt in 2 or 3 slots like this - https://i.imgur.com/2fOtSXM.jpg

This is getting expensive... the one in the picture is after running for about 3 weeks mining but on a 2 year old mobo (in a case)... the second one (unpictured - free air) had burned in 3 spots after a month and a half of mining..

Previously before mining scrypt and just SHA256 this was never a problem.. so I was wondering if anything else ran into this and what could be the cause.

Thanks!


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June 09, 2013, 11:15:18 PM
 #2

Uh-oh, sounds like someone cheaped out, and didn't get the powered Riser cables..

PCI-e slots, drawing too much power, most likely. On the bright side, atleast you didn't burn your house down

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June 09, 2013, 11:15:53 PM
 #3

It's caused by having too many cards with unpowered risers. You can convert your risers to powered quite easily with this tutorial:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=76121.0
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June 09, 2013, 11:30:43 PM
 #4

Uh-oh, sounds like someone cheaped out, and didn't get the powered Riser cables..

PCI-e slots, drawing too much power, most likely. On the bright side, atleast you didn't burn your house down

Didn't cheap out.. simply couldn't find them anywhere within North America at the time of building my machine. But I guess I'll look harder now since its a costly replacement.

@petr1fied thanks for the link Smiley

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June 09, 2013, 11:47:13 PM
 #5

Uh-oh, sounds like someone cheaped out, and didn't get the powered Riser cables..

PCI-e slots, drawing too much power, most likely. On the bright side, atleast you didn't burn your house down

Didn't cheap out.. simply couldn't find them anywhere within North America at the time of building my machine. But I guess I'll look harder now since its a costly replacement.

@petr1fied thanks for the link Smiley

When did you build your machine?

Powered risers were on eBay for years and most of them are in the US.

 
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June 10, 2013, 12:32:45 AM
 #6

Hello,

I'm wondering if any other miners have had this happen to them.. On 2 of my motherboards I've had the 24 pin connector melt in 2 or 3 slots like this - https://i.imgur.com/2fOtSXM.jpg

This is getting expensive... the one in the picture is after running for about 3 weeks mining but on a 2 year old mobo (in a case)... the second one (unpictured - free air) had burned in 3 spots after a month and a half of mining..

Previously before mining scrypt and just SHA256 this was never a problem.. so I was wondering if anything else ran into this and what could be the cause.

Thanks!
should you have external PSU?
 and solder 12V to appropriate  pins on PCI connection slot?
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June 10, 2013, 02:35:36 AM
Last edit: August 01, 2014, 07:49:49 PM by aa
 #7

.

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June 10, 2013, 03:08:39 AM
 #8

@aa This is what I have https://i.imgur.com/clAruOR.jpg

4 - Sapphire 7950's
1200 watt gold Seasonic PSU
Sabbertooth 990FX

I was mining litecoins.


Not the best of setups as I basically set it up quickly before going out of country for a couple weeks.. but I had it like this -> https://i.imgur.com/oVFDKUc.jpg

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June 10, 2013, 03:13:51 AM
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IMO I would replace not only mother board but your PSU.

Be thankful its just your mobo and maybe your PSU replacement... not your cards and everything else.

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June 10, 2013, 03:28:01 AM
 #10

Why replace the PSU? It's the top brand you can get..

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June 10, 2013, 04:00:00 AM
Last edit: August 01, 2014, 07:49:55 PM by aa
 #11

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Alexander KOSTIN | GoldMint


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June 10, 2013, 04:16:20 AM
 #12

@aa This is what I have https://i.imgur.com/clAruOR.jpg

4 - Sapphire 7950's
1200 watt gold Seasonic PSU
Sabbertooth 990FX

I was mining litecoins.


Not the best of setups as I basically set it up quickly before going out of country for a couple weeks.. but I had it like this -> https://i.imgur.com/oVFDKUc.jpg

You might want to try using one powered riser instead of the unpowered one, though I still don't believe that to be the issue.

Why replace the PSU? It's the top brand you can get..

I think the concern here is that the PSU is faulty and needs to be replaced by the manufacturer.

Edit: also, the people who try to push powered risers always go on about how you must use powered risers when you have more than "x" GPUs, but "x" is never the same number every time they go on about it.

The only downside is that this has happen on 2 separate machines both with different motherboard brands and PSU brands.. Doesn't seem like the PSU the defect causing this.. However, the plug is going to need to be replaced now on it.

I bought some powered risers to see if this will prevent this in the future but it's kinda hard to believe it was strictly just that.

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June 14, 2013, 12:48:16 PM
 #13

@aa This is what I have https://i.imgur.com/clAruOR.jpg

4 - Sapphire 7950's
1200 watt gold Seasonic PSU
Sabbertooth 990FX

I was mining litecoins.


Not the best of setups as I basically set it up quickly before going out of country for a couple weeks.. but I had it like this -> https://i.imgur.com/oVFDKUc.jpg

You might want to try using one powered riser instead of the unpowered one, though I still don't believe that to be the issue.

Why replace the PSU? It's the top brand you can get..

I think the concern here is that the PSU is faulty and needs to be replaced by the manufacturer.

Edit: also, the people who try to push powered risers always go on about how you must use powered risers when you have more than "x" GPUs, but "x" is never the same number every time they go on about it.

The only downside is that this has happen on 2 separate machines both with different motherboard brands and PSU brands.. Doesn't seem like the PSU the defect causing this.. However, the plug is going to need to be replaced now on it.

I bought some powered risers to see if this will prevent this in the future but it's kinda hard to believe it was strictly just that.

The only other thing I can suggest is that you have really bad power in your area. Are you using a surge protector? It could also be that your power needs to be filtered more than your PSU can handle.

The problem with people who report such burnt ATX connections is that they never give all the details. Most of the reports don't even state what hardware they use, and the ones that did always reported using ancient motherboards that were never specified to run with more than one or maybe two GPUs, or power supplies that clearly didn't have enough power on the 12v. This isn't the case for you, so it must be something unrelated to your immediate hardware--only because I believe the chances of you repeatedly getting broken hardware from different brands is very low.

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