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posted by martyb on Sunday October 10 2021, @01:22PM   Printer-friendly

High Power PCIe Gen5 power connector for next-gen GPUs pictured, up to 600W

Earlier this week [we published] an article about the upcoming flagship GeForce RTX 3090 Ti graphics card, which is now set to launch in January. The graphics card is supposedly the first card to feature a PCIe Gen5 power connector, a new standard that will ultimately solve one of the biggest drawbacks of the current 8-pin power connector, an insufficient power it can provide (up to 150W).

Igor Wallossek from Igor'sLAB managed to obtain the schematics and the information on the new connector, confirming that there is indeed a new standard coming, possibly to all new graphics cards in 2022.

Just as we said, the power connector has 16 lanes in total (12 power and 4 signal lanes), but it's not a MicroFit Molex standard, but something entirely new. The standard [as defined] has smaller spacing than existing connectors, a change from 4.2 mm to 3.0 mm. The connector has a width of 18.85 mm, so it is not exactly small, but much smaller than dual or triple 8-pin connector configuration. This will greatly simplify the circuit and PCB design process, not to mention all the space that will be saved.

The PCI-SIG specs define that each pin can sustain up to 9.2A, which means a total of 55.2 A at 12V. This gives a maximum power of 662W, but the specs officially go up to 600W, Igor notes. Along with twelve pins for power, there are [an] additional 4 signal lanes right underneath the connector. At this moment it is unclear what [their purpose is] or whether they are required or optional.

Also at Wccftech.


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  • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Monday October 11 2021, @04:08PM

    by maxwell demon (1608) on Monday October 11 2021, @04:08PM (#1186179) Journal

    A small part of the energy leaves the card in the form of electric signals to the motherboard, or to the monitor. Sure, eventually that energy will be turned into heat, too, but not in the graphics card (and also, eventually, any energy will be turned into heat, therefore it is not reasonable to count the heat generated elsewhere as part of the heat generated by the graphics card). Also, an even smaller of the energy will leave in the form of non-thermal electromagnetic radiation. And of course, part of it will be turned into kinetic energy of air or water, depending on the cooling system (remember, the connector provides power for the complete graphics card, not just the chips in it), and if it is air, probably also quite a bit of acoustic noise.

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