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NVIDIA's AIB partners are discontinuing blower fan designs for the GeForce RTX 3090

Started by Redaktion, March 01, 2021, 11:04:12

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Redaktion

AIBs including Gigabyte and ASUS have removed a number of GeForce RTX 3090 models with a blower-style fan from their websites. A Videocardz report hints that this could be in order to make way for cryptocurrency mining cards with blower fans. Whatever the reason may be, this is good news for gamers, on account of the inefficiency of blower fan tech.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-s-AIB-partners-are-discontinuing-blower-fan-designs-for-the-GeForce-RTX-3090.525696.0.html

Squirrel

The main reason for why blower heatsinks are used a lot in mining, is because of the stacking of the GPUs. Open-frame coolers perform better when they are separated by a considerable distance AND there is a continuous stream of case airflow to carry the warm air away from the GPU, so that the hot air isn't recycled by the open-frame fans.

Blowers work much better in tightly packed cases (multi-GPU setups or open-frame mining beds), because they circulate air in a linear path and don't recycle between two closely spaced GPUs. So you can stack more GPUs closer, with about 1 cm being all that is necessary. You can't do that with open-frame coolers under load, because they'll recycle hot air and overheat.

For mining, you want to use as little electricity as possible, and so people typically do open beds of mining GPUs. This allows the room to be cooled with just regular airflow. With open-frame coolers, this is harder, because you have to provide an external source of airflow to push the hot air away from the GPUs, because the flow path is not linear. That costs more money and if not done properly, can cook GPUs prematurely and then your profit evaporates.

Sukhoi

Blowers still have a use in compact builds, guess we'll have to get quadros going forward.

Trum Harnks

The real reason behind this is NVIDIA trying to avoid consumer cards being deployed to data centres and instead promote their significantly more expensive A-series cards for machine learning applications. The 2-slot blower cards work nicely in the likes of a Dell 3930 or HP ZC4R rackmounted 1-u workstations or other dense data centre deployments - and for ML training applications there is little incentive to fork out for an A40 or A100 if you may as well use a gaming card with the same amount of tensor cores - as long as it supports a rackable form factor and front-to-back airflow which the blower cards do. In 2018 NVidia changed their geforce driver T&Cs prohibiting "data centre use" as ML startups were using 2xxx gpus for training.... known pattern.

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