+- +-
Say hello if visiting :) by Gecko
11 Jan 2023, 07:43:05 pm

Seti is down again by Mike
09 Aug 2017, 10:02:44 am

Some considerations regarding OpenCL MultiBeam app tuning from algorithm view by Raistmer
11 Dec 2016, 06:30:56 am

Loading APU to the limit: performance considerations by Mike
05 Nov 2016, 06:49:26 am

Better sleep on Windows - new round by Raistmer
26 Aug 2016, 02:02:31 pm

Author Topic: How to reanimate GPU?  (Read 18873 times)

Offline Raistmer

  • Working Code Wizard
  • Volunteer Developer
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 14349
How to reanimate GPU?
« on: 18 Feb 2011, 03:18:30 am »

Offline Jason G

  • Construction Fraggle
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 8980
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #1 on: 18 Feb 2011, 03:40:15 am »
Maybe any suggestions, please?

http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/forum_thread.php?id=63230


You mentioned oil droplets, possibly from the cooling. An aftermarket cooler can be obtained with new heatpipes etc if that's the case, or water cooling, so that part is replaceable most likely.

 Have a close look with a magnifier around the solid capacitors in the power supply area for contamination of that substance, it might be those instead of the cooling & the droplets travelld due to air movement.  If they look a bit raised with a weird substance, then they are fried.  Replaceing those is very difficult to do safely on multilayer boards properly, & not worth the effort IMO, (but can be done).  There is no guarantee other parts weren't taken out with the buck converter failure though (if that is what happened).

Last possibility, off the top of my head, is some fault under the GPU itself with the BGA solder balls cracking, or other components with defective solder joints on the board.  There is a last ditch chance you can try , by removing all plastic parts and sticking in the oven to reflow the joints...  :-\  (Note: can't do that if there are components on both sides ... they'll fall off  ::) )

[Edit:]  By the way,  In a slightly similar situation, had received a dodgily soldered circuit board prototype the other day, with leadless chips poorly soldered on.  It took me an hour of fighting with the guy that brought the board to let me fix it, and 30 seconds to fix it,  by applying liquid flux to the top of the chip & applying a fencepost soldering iron to reflow the joints ... works great now & the method I used is pretty similar to how the chips are fitted in the factory.

The tools & skills needed to repair surface mount aren't that high tech, and the original manufacture techniques aren't that special either.
« Last Edit: 18 Feb 2011, 03:56:10 am by Jason G »

Offline Raistmer

  • Working Code Wizard
  • Volunteer Developer
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 14349
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #2 on: 18 Feb 2011, 03:58:36 am »
What puzzles me - there is no dark areas on board while I definitely heard spark sound (so there was short circuit somewhere) and feelt smell of burning.

Weak joints hardly an option IMHO - card worked few years already and this night there was no mechancal movement.... will look for capacitors and other areas...

Offline Jason G

  • Construction Fraggle
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 8980
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #3 on: 18 Feb 2011, 04:00:41 am »
will look for capacitors and other areas...

Look for fingerprints while you are there ... those are evil  :o  if there for a long duration (but no failure until 'dendritic salt growths' have time to form & short the tracks, you can only see those with a microscope, but the fingerprints are a giveaway. )

Offline skildude

  • Knight o' The Round Table
  • ***
  • Posts: 168
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #4 on: 18 Feb 2011, 11:33:00 am »
I think those oily spots on the memory chips is ominous.  thats probably what blew.  Just for kicks try and smell them.  See if thats what was burning

Offline Claggy

  • Alpha Tester
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • ***
  • Posts: 3111
    • My computers at Seti Beta
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #5 on: 18 Feb 2011, 11:38:29 am »
I think those oily spots on the memory chips is ominous.  thats probably what blew.  Just for kicks try and smell them.  See if thats what was burning
That's my thought too,

Claggy

Offline KarVi

  • Alpha Tester
  • Knight Templar
  • ***
  • Posts: 252
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #6 on: 18 Feb 2011, 11:56:34 am »
I would check the mem chips as well, there shouldn't be oil on them anyway, but it could me moisture from thermal paste, as some pastes give of moisture.

One other thing to check is the motherboard.

I have had a what i thought was a dead GFX-card, turn out to be a defective motherboard.
It was back in the AGP/PCI/ISA days, and the board would boot an old TSeng ET4000 card on ISA, but not anything on AGP (bought a cheapo temporary AGP card as replacement).

New motherboard, and the GFX card came back to life.

Perhaps you have similar problem, that doesn't prevent internal GFX card from working.

A defective supply for the PCI-E slots could be the sinner.

In the motherboard I had before the current one, the GFX card would not work in the top PCI-E slot (after leaky watercooling....), but worked fine in the second PCI-E slot. The board eventually died, I guess because of damage from the water/coolant, but thats another story.
« Last Edit: 18 Feb 2011, 12:00:06 pm by KarVi »
A smile is the shortest distance between two peoble (Victor Borge).

Offline SciManStev

  • Alpha Tester
  • Knight Templar
  • ***
  • Posts: 263
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #7 on: 18 Feb 2011, 04:08:30 pm »
Fear not. We are going to get you a new card one way or the other. I know full well how important it is to be connected to what you are programming.

Steve

Offline Raistmer

  • Working Code Wizard
  • Volunteer Developer
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 14349
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #8 on: 18 Feb 2011, 05:50:03 pm »
Thanks all for suggestions. Unfortunately cards is dead. I cleaned it, reinstalled - new shortcircuits...

For now I installed secondary GPU, will decompose this one again to see where shortcircuits were...

Offline Jason G

  • Construction Fraggle
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 8980
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #9 on: 18 Feb 2011, 07:22:55 pm »
will decompose this one again to see where shortcircuits were...

If nothing still immediately obvious, but there is dirt/dust/oil, there is a thorough cleaning cycle I can describe for a last ditch attempt, though the problem IMO would be connections inside the chips come adrift, or cracked balls under the GPU (thernal aging).

For my 2 cents worth, your time is more valuable to ATi card users right now than to rescuing some 2 generation old card.  Hopefully the dudes putting together a kitty toward a newer one will insiist on a Youtube video of violent destruction of the dead one...and ship you a newer one ... Then you'd have your remaining older one & a current generation one to work with, which I can vouch for helps a lot.

Jason

Offline Richard Haselgrove

  • Messenger Pigeon
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 2819
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #10 on: 18 Feb 2011, 07:52:05 pm »
For my 2 cents worth, your time is more valuable to ATi card users right now than to rescuing some 2 generation old card.  Hopefully the dudes putting together a kitty toward a newer one will insiist on a Youtube video of violent destruction of the dead one...and ship you a newer one ... Then you'd have your remaining older one & a current generation one to work with, which I can vouch for helps a lot.

Jason

I second that thought - time is far more important, and valuable, than hardware disection.

If you have the time, use it more productively by thinking about what class of card would be most useful for current and (near) future development testing. The pace of change is too fast to ask for "the best". Work out what would be most useful for now, to you, and give the fundraisers a clear steer. Otherwise you'll end up with a boxful of gamers' review cast-offs - they may help, or they may be a waste of silicon.

Offline Raistmer

  • Working Code Wizard
  • Volunteer Developer
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • *****
  • Posts: 14349
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #11 on: 18 Feb 2011, 08:10:59 pm »
AFAIK 6xxx is actually 2 families now, 68xx - Barts  and 69xx - Cayman.
Barts quite similar to Hd5xxx while Cayman is different beast. Looks like Cayman is new ATi architecture VLIW4 with what they will go. Future development should target it IMHO. For today's mainstraem smth from HD5xxx family would be enough though they missed all FERMI-like features that will allow few kernels to run simultaneously.
So I think "low-end" Cayman (if low-end is applicable here at all ;D ) more preferable than high-end GPU from prev generations, but it all depends on what will be achievable anyway.

Offline Claggy

  • Alpha Tester
  • Knight who says 'Ni!'
  • ***
  • Posts: 3111
    • My computers at Seti Beta
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #12 on: 18 Feb 2011, 08:15:43 pm »
Agree with Jason and Richard i do, broken card not worth spending much time diagnosing failure,
look to future, make sure you get card that suits your development purposes,
at least you're still got one example of old generation card,

Claggy

Offline skildude

  • Knight o' The Round Table
  • ***
  • Posts: 168
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #13 on: 18 Feb 2011, 10:28:15 pm »
the 6950 as I suggested on the seti forums should be adequate.  Its the same card as the 6970 with part of it streaming processes hobbled. 

Offline SciManStev

  • Alpha Tester
  • Knight Templar
  • ***
  • Posts: 263
Re: How to reanimate GPU?
« Reply #14 on: 19 Feb 2011, 08:22:11 am »
I will kick anything needed to get the best available. This is an opportunity that can't be passed up. If Jason's 480 melts down, then we'll get him a 590. For what you all have done for us, we can deliver back!

Steve

 

Welcome, Guest.
Please login or register.
 
 
 
Forgot your password?
Members
Total Members: 97
Latest: ToeBee
New This Month: 0
New This Week: 0
New Today: 0
Stats
Total Posts: 59559
Total Topics: 1672
Most Online Today: 50
Most Online Ever: 983
(20 Jan 2020, 03:17:55 pm)
Users Online
Members: 0
Guests: 43
Total: 43
Powered by EzPortal