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Thermaltake Tt Gaming Riser Cable카테고리 없음 2020. 1. 23. 02:46
Thermaltake TT Gaming PCI-E 3.0 x 16 20mm Riser Cable. CL SKU 29274. On Back Order. Save for later Item Saved. The Thermaltake Gaming PCI-E 3.0 X16 riser cable is ideal for use with select TT cases offering vertical GPU mounting. You can also use this cable to increase.
Thermaltake Core P90 Tempered Glass Edition Mid-Tower ChassisThermaltake has kicked open-frame chassis up to a notch andpresented theCore P90 Tempered Glass Edition Mid-tower Chassis. The Core P90 TG boasts the case structuresplit into threecompartments for graphic card, PSU and other cooling components. The triangular prism shapedbody and two 5mmthick tempered glass side panels turn the Core P90 into a hexagonal prism outlined creature,allowing for anultimate system display from every angle. Along with its 3-way placement layouts (wallmountable, horizontallaying and vertical standing), 7 drive bays with modular drive trays design and high liquidcooling systemexpandability, the Core P90 TG permits users upgraded aesthetics and limitless potentialwith how they want toconfigure their systems.A PCI Express Extender Cable is included. Go Vertical with your GPU and PSUIncluding the TT Gaming PCI-E 3.0 Riser Cable, choose theway you want todisplay your graphics card and display your power like never before, vertically, to show offall that colorfulpower.Thermaltake TT Premium PCI-E 3.0 Extender (Optional) – Supports a wide range of GPUsolutions withultra-efficient standards. Gain a strong connection with a high-speed, flexible design, EMIshielding withconducting polymer are crafted for meeting the most demanding system. Available in 300mm,600mm and 1000mmlength.
I have just finished a watercooled build on a Thermaltake Core P5 case,The cards not on water yet nor is it overclocked, I used the Riser cable that came with the case.Windows 10 got really bad stuttering in windows generally and crashes in 3D games etc.After a number of reinstalls of windows and various trials and error i got it down to the GPU causing the issue, I knew the GPU worked fine before the upgrade so i removed the Riser cable and had the GPU directly in the mother board, perfect! The system worked peachy.Question is, im lead to believe that the PCIE riser can cause timing issues leading to crashes and laggy performance.Its been suggest that PCIE 3.0 causes the issue and that i should change to 1.0 or 2.0 in the bios.Has anyone else had this problem and resolved it?
Thermaltake Tt Gaming Riser Cable Support
I'm dealing with the exact same problem as we speak and came to the same conclusion. I have and AMD RX480 installed in a Thermaltake Core P5 with the included riser cable. I installed Windows 7 then upgraded to Windows 10.
The display and Windows 10 were extremely buggy, kept getting errors about the driver not responding. The screen would flash black then come back, or would just crash completely and shut down. Often it would refuse to boot past the lock screen. That did not happen with Windows 7.I'm glad c1684901 responded with information. Did you ever try that cable or find any other solution that worked for you?@c1684901 Will the extended length on that cable degrade performance in any way?
I had looked into alternate PCIe riser cables but read that they generally don't make them longer because of performance drops.Also to anyone else who sees this, if you have any information/experience with this riser? It has good reviews on Amazon but only from 3 people so I'm trying to get more feedback on it before trying it. I'm wondering if this ever got solved as i have the same case and same riser cable. Screen goes black underload when connected with a 6 pin. Old gpu which doesn't have a 6 pin connection no issue. Same with intergrated graphics no issue.
I've replaced mobo, gpu and psu thinking.defective part. But problem still persist, it is only when i connect my evga 1070 gtx or even an old radeon HD 6870. Both have pin connectors. Would like to know if the riser is the problem for the reason eing the way i've down my piping wasn't very smart.lol i'd have to drain the coolant take apart the piping and re do the run, in order to mount the graphics card directly to the mobo.a lot of work just to find out it might not be the riser and the problem resides elsewhere. I'm dealing with the exact same problem as we speak and came to the same conclusion. I have and AMD RX480 installed in a Thermaltake Core P5 with the included riser cable. I installed Windows 7 then upgraded to Windows 10.
The display and Windows 10 were extremely buggy, kept getting errors about the driver not responding. The screen would flash black then come back, or would just crash completely and shut down. Often it would refuse to boot past the lock screen. That did not happen with Windows 7.I'm glad c1684901 responded with information. Did you ever try that cable or find any other solution that worked for you?@c1684901 Will the extended length on that cable degrade performance in any way? I had looked into alternate PCIe riser cables but read that they generally don't make them longer because of performance drops.Also to anyone else who sees this, if you have any information/experience with this riser?