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Neither of the above its 100% accurate the cards which burnt out were Inno3D X3 (on special offer this week I wonder why!!) not MSI BTW & that's with a 120mm case fan blowing cold air onto the backplate from 1cm away.Sounds to me that the card isn't getting any air and they shouldn't be "Burning out" as they have fail safes in place.
I think you're not telling us something, Over exaggerating or you're telling porkies.
That's one seriously ugly case
ASUS ROG Matrix GeForce GTX 980 Ti Platinum edition review @Guru3d.
http://www.guru3d.com/articles-pages/asus-rog-matrix-geforce-gtx-980-ti-platinum-edition-review,1.html
Neither of the above its 100% accurate the cards which burnt out were Inno3D X3 (on special offer this week I wonder why!!) not MSI BTW & that's with a 120mm case fan blowing cold air onto the backplate from 1cm away.
Both burnt out cards went under the backplate region it smelt strongly of burning days after. 1st card lasted 53 days of constant use @ 4K July to early Sept. Next card lasted 6 days before burning out in lower ambient temps.
Both times the cards were staying below 80C according to GPU-Z. I suspect the Inno3D bios was not activating the triple fans when it should as it was always silent even @ 4K for 10 hours on end in the blazing heat in July it was silent then 53 days later it burnt out.
Check back a few pages in this thread I posted pics of my side case fan as well.
May be a long shot but for those who have the G10/H55 on their cards, did you take any photos showing the process?
Been toying with the idea but don't know if it would be worth the hassle.
Also says that performance is the same on every decent 980TiThat review paints the card in a very good light.
There's no hassle, just 20 minutes of work.May be a long shot but for those who have the G10/H55 on their cards, did you take any photos showing the process?
Been toying with the idea but don't know if it would be worth the hassle.
If you have the MSI Gaming card then it's a direct fit. If you want to keep the backplate on then you do not install the foam pads on the G10 bracket.
You're talking about the foam on the small backplate or the two extra pads?
Will install mine in a few hours.
I'm having pretty bad temps with the G10, it gets to 70 degrees ._.
That seems wrong mine is idling in low 20s & only getting to 39C under full load. You sure its seated properly & getting the full 12V loading (use a molex to 3 pin convertor ensure that instead of relying on the motherboard 3 pin header as not all will supply 12v if you have any temp control running in the bios).I'm having pretty bad temps with the G10, it gets to 70 degrees ._.
ASUS ROG Matrix GeForce GTX 980 Ti Platinum edition review @Guru3d.
http://www.guru3d.com/articles-pages/asus-rog-matrix-geforce-gtx-980-ti-platinum-edition-review,1.html
If you have the MSI GTX 980 Ti Gaming (or any other air cooled 980 Ti) then this is a good way to reduce temps but if you only game @ 1080 you can get away with the stock HSF although it has way too much thermal paste on it for my liking the thing is literally drowning in it. For 4K I would not attempt that on this card unless you have extreme air cooling in your case or put the card under water or an AIO kit like this one.
I am struggling to make the GPU even reach 40C now @4K full monty on anything
Matrix seems to have a warranty sticker on one of the gpu retention screws as well =/