WYP
News Guru
What are your thoughts on AMD's reference RX 6000 design.

Read more about AMD's Radeon RX 6000 series GPU design.

Read more about AMD's Radeon RX 6000 series GPU design.
Very nice design; like something Sapphire would do, just with more red and R's.
Nah, the PCI-SIG power limit is derived from the wires rather than the pins/anything to do with Molex's ratings for the connector. 8Amps with standard 20AWG wire would have a ridiculous Vdrop after 1m (~5%). You'd need to reduce the power to under 4.5A to get under 2.5% Vdrop in 1 meter of 20AWG cabling, hence this being the ballpark rating for sustained load. All that energy loss becomes heat within the wires, so 5% loss may not sound like much but it's a fast track to flames when you're pumping hundreds of watts through thin wires.Looks very nice. I like it.
The 150W from 8-pin is outdated. Ancient PSUs made that limit. 8-pin can carry ~400W. This is an elaborate explanation from some form i can't remember:
The PCI-E connecter has 6 pins. They are not all used for power. For the 6 pin connector, Pins 1 & 3 are 12V & each can carry 8 Amps. Pin 2 by spec is not connected, although some PSU manufacturers do add a 12V line there. Pins 4 & 6 are Com return lines. Pin5 is Com for sensing. Using 2 lines, you get 12V*8A*2= 192Watts, much over the required 75Watts. With an 8 pin PCI-E connector, 2 Com lines are added (4&8) not a 12V & Com. There, Pins 1,2,3 are 12V, Pin 4 is a Com for the 8 pin connector sensing, Pin 5,7,8 are Com return lines, & pin 6 is for the 6 pin connector sensing. Using that config, 12V*8Amp*3=288 Watts, much over the required 150Watts. Since Mar 2005, the molex pins are required to be "HCS" rather than "Std", which each carry a max of 11Amps. So properly made, an 8 pin PCI-e can supply 12V*11Amps*3lines=396Watts of power for the graphic cards.
I thought 18AWG was the stndard.Nah, the power limit is derived from the wires rather than the pins. 8Amps with standard 20AWG wire would have a ridiculous Vdrop after 1m (~5%). You'd need to reduce the power to under 4.5A to get under 2.5% Vdrop in 1 meter of 20AWG cabling, hence this being the ballpark rating for sustained load. All that energy loss becomes heat within the wires, so 5% loss may not sound like much but it's a fast track to flames.
Nope, 20AWG is what's the spec is designed for(with the awareness that some will still use as thin as 22AWG), and the vast majority of cables use. 18AWG will still be common ofc, but you can't design for best case scenarios.I thought 18AWG was the stndard.
Nope, 20AWG is what's the spec is designed for(with the awareness that some will still use as thin as 22AWG), and the vast majority of cables use. 18AWG will still be common ofc, but you can't design for best case scenarios.
I've seen Igorslab state the correct 20AWG figure a few times recently, maybe you've read an old article based on assumptions from manufacturers defacto standards?According to Igorslab. 18AWG is the standard for GPU.
I've seen Igorslab state the correct 20AWG figure a few times recently, maybe you've read an old article based on assumptions from manufacturers defacto standards?
Nah, the PCI-SIG power limit is derived from the wires rather than the pins/anything to do with Molex's ratings for the connector. 8Amps with standard 20AWG wire would have a ridiculous Vdrop after 1m (~5%). You'd need to reduce the power to under 4.5A to get under 2.5% Vdrop in 1 meter of 20AWG cabling, hence this being the ballpark rating for sustained load. All that energy loss becomes heat within the wires, so 5% loss may not sound like much but it's a fast track to flames when you're pumping hundreds of watts through thin wires.
I don't think it looks to bad to be honest.
I just hope the performance matches it's good looks and the price is not sky high.