04-08-2019 11:41 AM
04-08-2019 01:58 PM
04-08-2019 04:41 PM
MaLLoc wrote:I'd be more inclined to look within the AMD Wattman software as your possible cause 1st...rather than the board...if you can get your hands on an NVidia GPU to test...that will narrow down where the issue possible is.
tested with another PSU , literally replacing the video card everything worked perfectly for a week and then the same exact thing is happening
04-09-2019 12:30 AM
Phillyflyer wrote:
I'd be more inclined to look within the AMD Wattman software as your possible cause 1st...rather than the board...if you can get your hands on an NVidia GPU to test...that will narrow down where the issue possible is.
04-09-2019 07:02 AM
MaLLoc wrote:Was just throwing that out there with regards to Wattman or Adrenalin as a possible issue...Not the 1st time that software has fried a card.....Thing is...cards have been replaced a few times and the issue seems to re occur over a short period of time and not instantly.....that being said....suggest you inspect the pins on the card for any damage while also inspecting the pins within the pcie slot as well for any damage....there could be a short within the pcie on the board.....next step is testing or swapping out the power supply (which I believe you have done)….then change out the 8/6 pin cables to the card to eliminate that....all else fails...then RMA the board.
how can the wattman be burning my cards out, also the same cards where in a previous build without an issue, and if wattman was an issue I am sure everyone with an AMD card would be burning them all out besides just me.
went to the store and got another RX580 and the machine is working normal again, while I call Asus up to RMA the card, the only thing i have changed is this new MotherBoard and the CPU and 2 Video cards with little hours on them have Broke within a week of play time.
04-09-2019 10:02 AM
04-09-2019 10:18 AM
Jan1torEarl wrote:
Previous suggestions are great but also make sure the metal bracket providing the connections out the back of your case is well grounded. I have an old Cooler Master case I put spare parts in to run a home server, which has plastic clips to easily swap PCI cards in and out. However it wasn't until I had replaced several video cards that I realized it wasn't fully seating the bracket. But when I used a screw to hold down the card like most cases I haven't had a problem since! Before the video card would fail to even post.
04-09-2019 11:39 AM
04-12-2019 11:06 PM