[SOLVED] Weird fan noise gpu

Jul 21, 2020
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Hi ,
I recently ear a loud noise coming from my pc while i was playing and i figured out it was my gpu fan (the noise is very loud i ear it with my headset with my music)
So i stress the gpu with 3Dmark and yes come again , the noise came from the fan to run at full speed and slow down , i think it's because the gpu reach 84° ( it's his limit so the fan goes crazy).
I clean it , try to put a 80mm fan below (only fan i can put it here ) , open the front case , all of that didn't work , my gpu doesn't even a 2 years old
Here what im talking ; https://streamable.com/iuh9d5
Here the result on 3DMARK View: https://imgur.com/71u7ESL
for the temp

So i got few question is that temp is bad ?, should i use a custom curve fan for my gpu , because it never happen before

Here my configuration :
Ram : DDR4 3200Hz 16GO
HDD : 1To
Alimentation : 850W (Gold+)
CPU : I9-9900K not overclocked
SSD M.2 : 500GO +120 GO +1to
Boitier : Bequiet Silent Base 801 + 2 fan Pure Wings 2 120mm on the top
Carte mère : MSI MPG Z390 GAMING PRO CARBON
GPU : Gigabyte GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 11go not overclocked
Ventirad : Be Quiet! Dark Rock Pro 4

Thank for the help
 
Solution
There was an issue on Gigabyte's 2080Ti cards where the fan(s) ramped up to 4000rpm or something when they reached throttle temp; the Turing cards have a thermal throttle temp of 83-84C, with a shutdown temp ~90C.
Cause of the fan behavior is unknown, except to Gigabyte.

Phaaze88

Titan
Ambassador
Try the latest Vbios update for fan rpm. Go to the product support page for the exact model you have. There will be bios files under the downloads section.
Before you proceed further, download Gpu-Z so you can find out which Vbios the card currently has.
Run it, click on the Advanced tab, click on the drop-down box and select Nvidia Bios. What you're looking for is under General > Message, with the Gpu ID, bios, and subsystem ID.
It'll look something like this: GV-N108TGAMING OC-11GD/F1/0543
What I've underlined is the bios version. Now, go back to the product support page and see which Vbios file is compatible with your version. The instructions on Vbios flashing are below.

If that doesn't work, or you're not comfortable with the above - understandable with Vbios flashing - then try the following:
While the fans are running, take your finger - or use a small stick - and simply stop one fan at a time to isolate the problem fan(s).
Once you've found it, you're going to have to take the card apart to see the fan ID.
You're going to use it to order more fans - also order thermal pads, because the current ones are pretty much going to be useless. *They'll be useless for the same reason it's recommended to replace thermal paste everytime a cooler is removed.
 

Phaaze88

Titan
Ambassador
Hi for the bios i got the lastest version available , shoud it be more fast to take something like this https://www.amazon.fr/gp/offer-listing/B00HHMJIIO/ref=dp_olp_new_mbc?ie=UTF8&condition=new
to cool my gpu ?
It can, but that item has a serious downside: it'll turn your gpu into a 5slot card!
Check chassis and motherboard clearance!

Some people tell me that it can be the motherboard , what do you think about it ?
I'd like to know how those people got to that myself.
The mobo is not much more than a messenger of power to the gpu through the PCIe slot.
 

Phaaze88

Titan
Ambassador
There was an issue on Gigabyte's 2080Ti cards where the fan(s) ramped up to 4000rpm or something when they reached throttle temp; the Turing cards have a thermal throttle temp of 83-84C, with a shutdown temp ~90C.
Cause of the fan behavior is unknown, except to Gigabyte.
 
Solution