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#23 | |
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"Graham uses ISO 8601"
Mar 2014
AU, Sydney
35 Posts |
Quote:
I would not want to contemplate the hazard of passing the bulk of such current through the wiper of a mechanical potentiometer. Though since were're talking mythically, such a device could be imagined to have magnificent specifications so as to fulfill the role without burning. The relationship between sensed current and angle of rotation of such mythical potentiometer would be very unlinear, with effect crowded at the near zero Ohms end. The above hazard can of course be diminished, but why would I want to spoil your idea with longer sentences about engineering realities! |
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#24 | |
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"Curtis"
Feb 2005
Riverside, CA
130416 Posts |
Quote:
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#25 |
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Apr 2014
27 Posts |
Could you put a small resistor in series with the POT?
Last fiddled with by flagrantflowers on 2015-10-02 at 00:49 |
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#26 |
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"Curtis"
Feb 2005
Riverside, CA
22·1,217 Posts |
Since the POT with the required properties is mythical, we can surely put an arbitrarily small resistor in series to achieve a lower bound on the resistance of our alternate path. Or, we could just set a minimum level on the mythical POT.
How much power do you want to allow your card to draw? Is your answer in mythical watts, or real heat-producing watts? |
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#27 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
32×29×37 Posts |
How small? The original one is already 5 milliohm, and has no potentiometer, wiper (cursor) contact, soldering joints (between pot and eventual serial resistor).
(I hope that everybody understand that all this discussion is just "for fun", we all (myself included) are trying more or less ironically to push the limits of the ridiculous. In reality, as it was already said in the thread by different people, things are not done like that, by "adjusting" the shunt resistors, and I really hope that nobody will start hacking into his/her GTX Titan to "make it more powerful" in this way)
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2015-10-02 at 02:46 |
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#28 | |
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Serpentine Vermin Jar
Jul 2014
3,313 Posts |
Quote:
I had no idea there's that much current flowing through there, and I kind of doubt there is or the shunt itself would need to be pretty beefy. All it's doing is providing a fixed voltage drop (a very small one since it's mOhms). Same power sensing stuff you'd find in a breaker box or a voltmeter for that matter. Shorting across it means the V across the shunt drops to near zero instead of whatever it was, and I guess that reading is handled in the BIOS somewhere to do whatever. Suggesting a POT isn't too insane, is it? Saying the wiper couldn't handle the current, even all the way down, seems strange given that a tiny solder bridge is expected to do just that in the original example. So either I'm not grasping the actual circuitry, or...? As retina suggested also, if it's a matter of power handling, take the exact same resistor on the board and wire that in parallel... you've halved the voltage drop across the shunt which may give you finer control, compared to the brute force "short across it" approach... that's all I was saying originally. LOL Anyway, hey, we're all just having fun here, we can be friends. It's theoretical to me especially... I don't have a GPU and probably will never bother unless one were given to me or was so cheap I *had* to buy it.
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#29 | ||
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
32×29×37 Posts |
Quote:
Of course, limiting the power is a common sense thing to do, that is why it is limited from the factory. Reducing the resistor is preferable to shorting it, from a thousand reasons. No one arguing with you here. Quote:
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2015-10-02 at 07:05 |
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#30 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
965710 Posts |
For the part with the wiper handling the current, think about the fact that the resistance is R=
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2015-10-02 at 06:49 |
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#31 |
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Feb 2012
34·5 Posts |
Shortly after these fabulous GPUs were introduced it was shown, on mersenneforum.org, that to yield reliable LL results, Titans have to be down clocked (particularly in the memory department). Is this now outdated information?
Otherwise, why all the talk about overclocking: to churn out incorrect residues faster? Disclosure, I do not own a Titan, although I am interested now that a few are available on the used market, from gamers upgrading. |
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#32 |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
9,767 Posts |
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#33 | |
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Serpentine Vermin Jar
Jul 2014
CF116 Posts |
Quote:
For some reason in my mind, I was envisioning the type of system used for devices that maintain electrical contact while swiveling around or can infinitely rotate. Of course in those cases I think they use concentric copper rings that maintain solid contact, not just at a single point. Fair enough criticism of my idea. How about this one then... instead of a solder bridge, just a "whatever" length of wire, where the length is determined by what resistance you want? After all, we're talking about some small resistance anyway, so a coil of 20 feet of whatever gauge copper, perhaps? As long as there's no AC component to the power (there shouldn't be on a 12VDC regulated supply), I don't imagine a coil of wire would pose any issues besides an interesting electromagnetic effect. Might even wind it to counter that effect. It's been a (long) while since I've calculated the resistance of wire based on the various factors (cmil, length, material, etc). I honestly have no idea what length at what gauge would approximate a few milli-Ω similar to the resistor already there. Oh well. Like you said, you really have to be trying hard and willing to risk a few things to even bother with any of this. LOL More power to you (pun intended). |
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