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Please power down and connect te PCIe power cable(s) for this graphics card

spwath

I get this message when using a 980 ti.

Card might be broken, old psu blew and took Motherboard with it.

 

I am running it with a 450w seasonic psu. I5-6400. That's all I get on the screen though.

Is the card just dead?

 

Yes I made sure the 6 pin and 8 pin are plugged in.

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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4 minutes ago, spwath said:

I get this message when using a 980 ti.

Card might be broken, old psu blew and took Motherboard with it.

 

I am running it with a 450w seasonic psu. I5-6400. That's all I get on the screen though.

Is the card just dead?

 

Yes I made sure the 6 pin and 8 pin are plugged in.

your processor has integrated graphics, do they work

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Just now, OddGreyFox211 said:

your processor has integrated graphics, do they work

Yes, and I have an rx 480 that works

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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The video card has fuses by the pci-e 6 pin and 8 pin connectors. 

It could be that one or both/all fuses are blown up due to something failing on the video card which causes excessive power consumption, or could be they failed because the power supply failed.

Grab a multimeter and set it in continuity mode and see if there's continuity across the components marked with F and maybe a number (f is for fuse)

 

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2 minutes ago, mariushm said:

The video card has fuses by the pci-e 6 pin and 8 pin connectors. 

It could be that one or both/all fuses are blown up due to something failing on the video card which causes excessive power consumption, or could be they failed because the power supply failed.

Grab a multimeter and set it in continuity mode and see if there's continuity across the components marked with F and maybe a number (f is for fuse)

 

Ok, I will try that, time to take off the backplate. Thanks.

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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11 minutes ago, mariushm said:

The video card has fuses by the pci-e 6 pin and 8 pin connectors. 

It could be that one or both/all fuses are blown up due to something failing on the video card which causes excessive power consumption, or could be they failed because the power supply failed.

Grab a multimeter and set it in continuity mode and see if there's continuity across the components marked with F and maybe a number (f is for fuse)

 

I don't see any f, just c capacitor, r resistor, L, U, q, and d

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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Still can't get it to work.

Could it be my 450w seasonic isn't delivering enough power?

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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1 hour ago, spwath said:

I don't see any f, just c capacitor, r resistor, L, U, q, and d

Here they are on this msi 980ti : https://www.techpowerup.com/review/nvidia-geforce-gtx-980-ti/5.html

 

They're not actually fuses on this card, they're resistors with very low values (should be 5 milliohms or 0.005 ohm) ... the controller chip measures the current going through these resistors and if the current is too high , it reduces gpu clock frequencies and so on...

 

image.png.06d60dde61b7a1ea4697911fa5cd2c46.png

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7 hours ago, mariushm said:

Here they are on this msi 980ti : https://www.techpowerup.com/review/nvidia-geforce-gtx-980-ti/5.html

 

They're not actually fuses on this card, they're resistors with very low values (should be 5 milliohms or 0.005 ohm) ... the controller chip measures the current going through these resistors and if the current is too high , it reduces gpu clock frequencies and so on...

 

image.png.06d60dde61b7a1ea4697911fa5cd2c46.png

Ok, I thought those might have been it, tested fine for continuity.

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

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  • 1 year later...

Did you ever get you pc working 

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