jimmysmitty :
turkey3_scratch :
The 300 Series didn't even have a reference card.
Because it was the exact same GPU as the R( 290, even the PCB, so they didn't need to redesign the custom cooling. Hell the R9 390X having 8GB VRAM was not new since at launch you could get a R9 290X with 8GB VRAM for almost $100 less than the R9 390X.
Most AiBs were able to just reuse the same PCBs and coolers.
Suzuki@1473780084@1473780163 :
Any proof that pcie was the problem yet? I doubt that personally, because I havent found a source that is accurate to electricity, like reading comedy.
Everything is still pointing to the fact that the GPU is pulling more power than it should from the PCIe slot.
I am pretty sure the guys at Toms are more experienced than you think and know more than you think they do.
What people are throwing around as the cause is normal for GPU's. And I've not liked many Tom's articles due to the lack of information.
When is this going to be corrected?
"Believe it or not, the situation gets even worse. AMD's Radeon RX 480 draws 90W through the motherboard’s PCIe slot during our stress test. This is a full 20 percent above the limit."
I don't like the "authority on tech" jumping to conclusions when there's not enough evidence. Clearly a case of grabbing as many readers as possible.
And what about the initial handshake power draw from a GPU? If it doesn't pass, then the card shouldn't run.
Specifications doesn't tell us much, it's not the end nor proof because electronics aren't limited to a specification, they often pull more than what they can handle looking at the spec sheets.
I'm very interested to see if there will be any legal actions considering AMD may have hidden something to cut corners on production.
I'm also interested whether or not this case is/was bigger than the GTX 970 fiasco.