J
John
The "SLI Ready" logo on Power Supply boxes may make you think it is
certified to run SLI, but that may not be so.
You may find yourself in the same shoes as I am, when you are trying to
diagnose motherboard problems and the MB techie asks how many amps your
power supply can handle for 5v, 3.5v, etc. and then tells you it isn't
big enough for the SLI video card you bought. "But, it said it was 'SLI
Ready'" "Sorry, but it's not."
So, where do you go to find out what Power Supply to buy? The Power
Supply people don't tell you. The motherboard people say to ask nVidia.
nVidia says they don't provide technical information for video cards,
they just make the chip that goes in them. The video card people won't
tell you. And from each of these sources I have found some that did not
know. My motherboard supplier techie said, "Here are the amps we'd like
to see ..."
Now, many are going to say, "Why didn't you look at _____ site?" Well,
I never found _____ site, that's why.
But eventually I did find this site; note that it's not nVidia.com:
http://www.slizone.com/object/slizone_build_psu.html
There, notice that there is a different selector for GTX, GTX, and other
configurations.
Oh, you say, I'll just send my power supply back if I find this out
later. Oh, no you won't. The supplier has this little tag that says
they will only take it back if it is defective, that you are under the
manufacturer's warranty, which does you a whole lot of good if you
bought the wrong power supply! You now own an EBay item.
I concluded that I was stuck with my power supply and replaced it while
I am chasing down motherboard problems in my new system. In so doing,
the new power supply died. Yippee! I sent it back as defective and was
in an excellent position to ask for an upgrade, which I got. The
original power supply was 600 watts, the new one is 850 watts. In
looking back on how I went about it, there is no way I would have found
the right site to look for the right product.
One big problem with the SLIzone site is that it appears to be out of
date. Here are all these hot cards coming out and the power supply
people are racing to put big enough products out there and they have the
dreaded "SLI Certification Pending" status, which means you don't know
if it is or if it isn't. So, like me, you buy it anyway, because by now
you know what kind of specs you need. Hope it works. Thanks a lot,
nVidia, for not finishing the project!
So, what happens if you don't buy a big enough power supply? One
engineer explained that you should be able to boot up all right. But
when your video card starts pumping, the power supply won't be able to
keep up and will then shut down. Supposedly, they build them so they
won't smoke.
So what's needed? First, the "SLI Ready" logo ought to say which SLI
card the product is certified for. That is a MUST! Secondly, since the
SLIzone site is running behind, they ought to provide the specs for
certification so we can see what the vendor claims for the product
before they accomplish certification. Now, nVidia is probably saying I
don't know what I'm talking about, and they're right! It's their job,
not mine. But they didn't do their job. Why don't they come out with a
working plan? That plan ought to meet the problems I've described in
this paper.
Right?
John
certified to run SLI, but that may not be so.
You may find yourself in the same shoes as I am, when you are trying to
diagnose motherboard problems and the MB techie asks how many amps your
power supply can handle for 5v, 3.5v, etc. and then tells you it isn't
big enough for the SLI video card you bought. "But, it said it was 'SLI
Ready'" "Sorry, but it's not."
So, where do you go to find out what Power Supply to buy? The Power
Supply people don't tell you. The motherboard people say to ask nVidia.
nVidia says they don't provide technical information for video cards,
they just make the chip that goes in them. The video card people won't
tell you. And from each of these sources I have found some that did not
know. My motherboard supplier techie said, "Here are the amps we'd like
to see ..."
Now, many are going to say, "Why didn't you look at _____ site?" Well,
I never found _____ site, that's why.
But eventually I did find this site; note that it's not nVidia.com:
http://www.slizone.com/object/slizone_build_psu.html
There, notice that there is a different selector for GTX, GTX, and other
configurations.
Oh, you say, I'll just send my power supply back if I find this out
later. Oh, no you won't. The supplier has this little tag that says
they will only take it back if it is defective, that you are under the
manufacturer's warranty, which does you a whole lot of good if you
bought the wrong power supply! You now own an EBay item.
I concluded that I was stuck with my power supply and replaced it while
I am chasing down motherboard problems in my new system. In so doing,
the new power supply died. Yippee! I sent it back as defective and was
in an excellent position to ask for an upgrade, which I got. The
original power supply was 600 watts, the new one is 850 watts. In
looking back on how I went about it, there is no way I would have found
the right site to look for the right product.
One big problem with the SLIzone site is that it appears to be out of
date. Here are all these hot cards coming out and the power supply
people are racing to put big enough products out there and they have the
dreaded "SLI Certification Pending" status, which means you don't know
if it is or if it isn't. So, like me, you buy it anyway, because by now
you know what kind of specs you need. Hope it works. Thanks a lot,
nVidia, for not finishing the project!
So, what happens if you don't buy a big enough power supply? One
engineer explained that you should be able to boot up all right. But
when your video card starts pumping, the power supply won't be able to
keep up and will then shut down. Supposedly, they build them so they
won't smoke.
So what's needed? First, the "SLI Ready" logo ought to say which SLI
card the product is certified for. That is a MUST! Secondly, since the
SLIzone site is running behind, they ought to provide the specs for
certification so we can see what the vendor claims for the product
before they accomplish certification. Now, nVidia is probably saying I
don't know what I'm talking about, and they're right! It's their job,
not mine. But they didn't do their job. Why don't they come out with a
working plan? That plan ought to meet the problems I've described in
this paper.
Right?
John