Sadly, in my experience graphics cards draw a fairly steady current independent 
of usage (it varies a bit, but less than 20%).   Some of the newer cards may be 
better.  There are utilities for at least some cards to adjust the clock on the 
GPU  (normally used by mad gamers/miners to overclock).   These might be an 
option, cmos draw power at a rate determined by clock frequency and it's a 
squared relationship, half the clock speed means about 1/4 the power draw.  

I would also like to find some low power graphics cards, The only option I'm 
aware of  is to buy older, used cards on ebay.  I have a few machines I'd like 
to run headless most of the time, but basic text or basic graphics would be 
nice occasionally, but I don't want to waste 200W+ on a high end graphics card 
that never gets exercised.

Other than that, I've used an external 80mm fan to blow air across the heat 
sink and out the adjacent slot (after the attached fan failed and i removed it. 
 I mounted the fan in the drive cage.  The fans on graphics cards are generally 
moving air the worst way possible (just like many cpu heat sink/fan combos), 
blasting it into the face of a heatsink at high speed so there is some flow 
through the channels with massive, massive turbulence/noise.  Oddly enough 
although the built in fan had a tachometer the card doesn't pay any attention 
to what it thinks is the fan speed, even if the fan stalls completely so you 
don't have to "fool" the graphics card when removing the provided fan and using 
an "external" fan.


"Would you like to see us rule again, my friend?   All you have to do is follow 
the worms."  Pink Floyd, The Wall, Waiting for the worms




Jun 16, 2019, 3:36 PM by antli...@youngman.org.uk:

> On 11/06/2019 20:21, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
>
>>> Plus, my current GT730 is passively cooled. Are there any RX cards that
>>> at least spin down the fans when I'm working on desktop (no
>>> plasma/gnome, simple Openbox with no heavy gpu requirements). I really
>>> like silence!:-)
>>>
>> I can't hear mine at all right now.
>>
>
> The larger the fan, the slower (and quieter) it spins. So if it needs a fan, 
> try and make sure it's a big one.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Wol
>


Reply via email to