Is my new GTX 1080 dead?!

Distance03

Commendable
May 27, 2016
52
0
1,630
Hey guys;

I just purchased a used GTX 1080; the individual who sold it to me told me he only used it once to benchmark it in his test rig and has been kind enough to order me a replacement, free of charge.

But I'm starting to get nervous - is it the card or my PC that's the issue?

First, let me describe what's happening:

I uninstalled my GTX 980 Ti (drivers first, then the card), inserted the GTX 1080, aaaand - no signal.

It took me all night to figure out how to set the BIOS to boot into intergrated graphics WITH the GTX 1080 just so I could simply use the computer.

I found that there was an error code 43 on the drivers. I reinstalled, rolled back, and nada. Some people have suggested code 43 indicates hardware failure, hence the title of the topic.

Inserting my GTX 980 Ti even now WITHOUT the drivers runs fine!

I also (gulps) had the courage to update my bios and that went well thankfully. I pulled CMOS battery - I've tried everything.

Here is my PSU and Motherboard just in case that helps

https://m.newegg.com/Product/index?itemnumber=N82E16817182239

https://m.newegg.com/Product/index?itemnumber=N82E16813130886

 
Any graphics card should output a low res display without ANY drivers.

If the GTX1080 was known to be good, and you trust the seller, then you perhaps did not install it securely and squarely in the slot.
Perhaps the aux pcie power connectors were not inserted at either end well.

Considering that you had no problem with reinserting your former GTX980ti, I might conclude that the new GTX1080 was, in fact defective.
You might check the support forums for the GTX1080 vendor to see if there might be something obvious missing.
 

Distance03

Commendable
May 27, 2016
52
0
1,630
I do trust the seller and once again he's been extremely patient and is willing to replace, but before I put him through the trouble (and avoid embarrassment) I want to ensure it's the card and not dumb 'ole me!

The card is securely slotted. It goes in deep enough to "click" with the board. It's the EVGA GTX 1080 s'oc - it uses one 8pin connector on the side of the card. It comes with an adapter and I installed that correctly as well.
 

Distance03

Commendable
May 27, 2016
52
0
1,630
This is difficult to explain but here it goes: the adapter is a 8pin to two seperate 6 pins. I've tried doing that as well as using my 6+2 pin directly from my PSU to the card.

Neither solution worked
 

Distance03

Commendable
May 27, 2016
52
0
1,630
Okay I see. I'm totally perplexed - I've never had this much trouble with a new GPU before.

If you don't mind telling me - what usually causes this kind of behavior ? Did it catch static? Is it a possible voltage/wattage distribution problem? The fans and the LEDs light up no problem...

As a matter of fact, I can hear windows boot up through the hdmi out on the card, the monitor turns "on", but just a black screen - starring back at me; what was it that Nietzsche said about the abyss again? :p

I get off late tonight but I'll update everyone when I get to the bottom of this.
 

sla70r

Honorable
Jan 20, 2014
576
2
11,065
I would Hook up both at once , run everything through the 980. I would see if my Nvidia control panel recognized I had a 1080 plugged in as well. Try to set it to handling the physics. See if it let's you do that. Hook up an hdmi or DVI to both, and see if you can swap which card is displaying through the Nvidia control panel.
 

Distance03

Commendable
May 27, 2016
52
0
1,630
Just an update!

I met with the gentleman who sold me the card; we tried it in his PC and sure enough - it didn't work!

He egearly replaced it with another EVGA GTX 1080 SC (brand new), and apologized profusely.

Got home, plugged it in, and spent about four hours straight enjoying games on ultra at 90FPS+

Moral(s) of the story:
- Code 43 often means hardware failure.
- Familiarize yourself with the RMA process.
- Never buy a $650+ GPU unless you have the option to return/replace.

DOAs are rare but real!