AMD's $25,000 GPU: Instinct MI210 Tear-Down ft. Level1Techs

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Gamers Nexus

Gamers Nexus

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 778
@GamersNexus
@GamersNexus Жыл бұрын
It's just genuinely super fun to hangout with Wendell and see this kind of stuff! He's borrowing the server and these GPUs for benchmarking on his channel, so check him out to see the results! (FYI - we filmed this way before the AMD announcements, it was just a late upload, so the 7900 XTX wasn't known yet). Via Wendell, this is an AMD MI210 GPU (meaning that the shroud lists the MI200 series, maybe because it's an older shroud, but the GPU core itself is the MI210 -- so the silicon would be the MI210). Subscribe to Level1Techs: kzbin.info (you can also find his benchmarks here!) Find Wendell's tour of our office on his channel: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qqmXZIusgq6an9U Watch our other video with Wendell, featuring a server tear-down (the one that had these cards): kzbin.info/www/bejne/faOypJx5j56AjKc
@BeardedHardware
@BeardedHardware Жыл бұрын
I’m interested in the toilet seats haha
@edgeldine3499
@edgeldine3499 Жыл бұрын
Like these videos. Could you guys had text to explain some of the acronyms and terminology? Sometimes its hard to keep track lol
@markmulder996
@markmulder996 Жыл бұрын
Wendell is a unique combination of an easy going, downright great guy who knows VERY, VERY well what he's talking about. Love his channel and his visits to people like yourself and Linus.
@KenS1267
@KenS1267 Жыл бұрын
13:54 The speaker is labeled SPK1 on the PCB. Beyond the fact it looks like one it is labeled as one. Many components that can overheat and are not directly monitored by IPMI type systems have these sorts of alarms.
@Silentjackll
@Silentjackll Жыл бұрын
Holy crap! I couldn't nail it down for the longest time. But it finally hit me. Wendell looks and sounds almost exactly like the gadget inventor father on the movie "Gremlins". WOW man. That is crazy!
@roxymigurdia-t5p
@roxymigurdia-t5p Жыл бұрын
I like to think Wendell just shows up to the GN offices unannounced with various hardware saying, "Hey, check this out!"
@gamingonthespectrum
@gamingonthespectrum Жыл бұрын
I now will forever believe this
@Apollo-Computers
@Apollo-Computers Жыл бұрын
What a dream :)
@CesarinPillinGaming
@CesarinPillinGaming Жыл бұрын
Then as he leaves "back to you steve!"
@Fractal_32
@Fractal_32 Жыл бұрын
Via server rack, this is a crucial step.
@ChinchillaBONK
@ChinchillaBONK Жыл бұрын
"BRUH! CHU GOT TO SEE DIS!"
@jer_h
@jer_h Жыл бұрын
Black goop is called “BGA underfill” and it’s for reducing thermal stress on the solder balls. Became a much bigger thing after the Xbox 360 RROD.
@Keepskatin
@Keepskatin Жыл бұрын
Interesting, go on ⛏️
@jer_h
@jer_h Жыл бұрын
Basically, there are two (or more) materials with different CTEs (coefficient of thermal expansion), in this case the BGA substrate and the PCB. When the board heats up, the BGA and the board want to grow/shrink at different rates and different total amounts. The weakest point is the solder joint between the two substrates, and the stress caused by the different expansion rates can cause the joints to crack (and then the card doesn’t work anymore). This black goop tries to take some of the strain off the joints. All “fixed” Xbox 360s had this goop applied to them as far as I know.
@GamersNexus
@GamersNexus Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info!
@ragingraven7915
@ragingraven7915 Жыл бұрын
Someone should have told Sony about it and use it on their fat PS3s
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
@@ragingraven7915 Shhhh! Don't enable those folks! Microsoft do something half-right and you want to spoil it? 🙂
@cmdrclassified
@cmdrclassified Жыл бұрын
Wendell is such a great guy! I always love seeing you two doing collaborations. Have a great day! o7
@GamersNexus
@GamersNexus Жыл бұрын
I always learn so much from Wendell when he visits!
@bjn714
@bjn714 Жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus and some of it's probably even about computers!
@shiftreport3229
@shiftreport3229 Жыл бұрын
Steve, Wendell, Ian. and Gordon are like the 4 horsemen of the techocalypse. LOL! I love all of you guys.
@cmdrclassified
@cmdrclassified Жыл бұрын
@@shiftreport3229 HaHaHa! I love it! Take note, Steve! We need t-shirts for this now!
@Super-360
@Super-360 Жыл бұрын
Used to like Wendell but then he ruined my image of him talking about politics on his channel.
@unknownbeastgaming7264
@unknownbeastgaming7264 Жыл бұрын
Wow, this is a piece of art.
@Dark.Syndicate
@Dark.Syndicate Жыл бұрын
@Bully Maguire 🅥 how ironic.
@therealnoodledog6660
@therealnoodledog6660 Жыл бұрын
But can it run Crysis?
@marvintpandroid2213
@marvintpandroid2213 Жыл бұрын
@@therealnoodledog6660 can the AI on it play Crysis
@therealnoodledog6660
@therealnoodledog6660 Жыл бұрын
@@marvintpandroid2213 and would the AI run Crysis on max settings?
@bjn714
@bjn714 Жыл бұрын
I love Wendell too, and he is a piece of art indeed, but can we not call him a "this"? 🤣
@nickl6820
@nickl6820 Жыл бұрын
There's something about the videos with Steve and Wendell that I enjoy. They always seem to be having a good time, and messing with cool hardware.
@GearSeekers
@GearSeekers Жыл бұрын
Wendell is such a legend! Had a really good catch up with him last week in Vegas.
@snicketlemony5820
@snicketlemony5820 Жыл бұрын
Damn, the amount of SMD components is so much, this reminds me of "an architects dream is an engineer's nightmare". Probs to anyone who can actually solder anything like this.
@kanetw_
@kanetw_ Жыл бұрын
Any decent PCBA can do this.
@bartbroekhuizen5617
@bartbroekhuizen5617 Жыл бұрын
Just correctly place the components and bake it with hot air. Tin will melt and connects the components together to the PCB. Did it many times at school. Its much easier then traditional soldering, because you don't need physical connection with your hand to the PCB which can result in touching / moving other components. The components on these kind of PCB's are off course done with machines. Machines have a higher precision and less prone to errors than humans, especially if its repetitive.
@sidichochase
@sidichochase Жыл бұрын
People do not solder these assemblies. The parts are placed by automated pick and place machines. The paste is put down with a stencil. the reflow is done in an IR/hot air oven with a controlled temperature profile. Success is by process, not chance.
@notsure6834
@notsure6834 Жыл бұрын
SMD components 😏
@shalopez420
@shalopez420 Жыл бұрын
Former SMT Machine Operator here, It was my job to operate the machines that make video cards and many other PCBAs for companies such as Google, Honeywell, Boeing, IBM, NASA, and VIASAT, to name a few. These are made on a automated line. First, non-populated blank boards called printed circuit boards (PCBs) are loaded onto a conveyer. Then, a stencil with the pattern of the solder pads is loaded. A squeegy goes across and spreads solder paste through the stencil onto the PCB. The pasted PCB continues down the line through a series of pick and place machines, that are basically high-speed, high-accuracy cap and chip machine guns that "shoot" the parts onto the solder pads, which the parts "stick" to through surface tension. The printed circuit board assemblies (PCBAs) are populated from the smallest parts first such as 0201 capacitors and resistors, to the largest parts such as chokes, transformers, and BGAs last. Only odd-shaped and large parts such as connectors are placed by hand. After being populated, the PCBAs then go through a oven with a specific temperature profile that gradually heats up the boards and solder paste, flows the solder, and cools it at a controlled rate. From here they move onto either hand-placed parts, seal/epoxy/coatings and finally into a automated tester, followed by being packaged and shipped to the customer. The lead-in time and lead-out times in the oven are so the PCBAs and the parts on them do not experience thermal shock, which could interfere with the function of the device or cause broken solder connections, amongst other issues.
@evolution1565
@evolution1565 Жыл бұрын
My favorite thing about these server cards is the EPS 12V 8-pin connector. Used in servers for many years, capable of delivering 384w per connector. The 40 series would have been fine if Nvidia just used 2 EPS 8-pins instead of the 12-pin.
@Alex-zi1nb
@Alex-zi1nb Жыл бұрын
if a single 8 pin can deliver 384 watts why tf have companies been adding 2 and 3 (and now 4090 issues)?!?!
@JMccovery
@JMccovery Жыл бұрын
@@Alex-zi1nb The EPS connector has 4 12V and 4 GND pins versus the 3 12V, 3 GND and 2 sense pins of the 8-pin PEG connector. I'm guessing that when the EPS PSU specification was designed, GPUs barely used more than 150w, but dual socket and higher servers (since EPS is part of the SSI mainboard spec) could pull far more power; and the different pinouts were to prevent the wrong (underpowered) connector from being used. Utilizing 5 12v rails spread two 8-pin EPS connectors (12V1, 12V2, 12V4, 12V5) and the 24-pin ATX connector (12V3), 1008 watts can be drawn through the motherboard (plus CPUs, DRAM, bus-powered PCIe cards, etc) alone.
@Mr.Leeroy
@Mr.Leeroy Жыл бұрын
@@JMccovery How many layers of mobo you would have to dedicate to power planes entirely to be able to pass 1kW?
@JMccovery
@JMccovery Жыл бұрын
@@Mr.Leeroy Could probably be done on 12 layers, but would more than likely have 16+ layers, like the EVGA SR-3 Dark and Asus Dominus Extreme.
@stranglehold4713
@stranglehold4713 Жыл бұрын
I cannot overstate how valuable of a resource Wendell's channel has been to me. You guys have the best content, love the collab
@AetherProwl
@AetherProwl Жыл бұрын
We need an MI250X teardown. That’s the one with two gpu chiplets and eight stacks (128GB) of HBM2e
@asm_nop
@asm_nop Жыл бұрын
11:52 Precision current shunt resistors. With typical 2-wire shunts you're forced to measure not just the shunt, but also the resistance of the tabs and solder joints. They're significant down at the milliOhms level, and throw off accuracy a bit. The "4-wire" ones put all the load current through the large tabs. The small tabs let you measure voltage drop directly across the shunt, without all the other garbage in series with it.
@samfedorka5629
@samfedorka5629 Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to agree and add that current sense resistors are already sensed 4-w through the PCB. This specific resistor has cutouts to help soldering (very low thermal impedance power lines and high thermal impedance sense lines) and to maintain the low inductance. (this is also why it's so wide and flat: very low inductance). I looked it up and this is a WSL3637 by Vishay Dale. 1L0 stands for 1 milliohm.
@Ariane-Bouchard
@Ariane-Bouchard Жыл бұрын
I really wish we could get more clean-looking cards like that in the consumer market.
@wpyoga
@wpyoga Жыл бұрын
That won't ever happen because everyone knows RGB adds 300% fps /s
@miguelpereira9859
@miguelpereira9859 Жыл бұрын
@@wpyoga The more RGB in ur setup = the more pro
@r3.4ct
@r3.4ct Жыл бұрын
Right.. A nice slim black matte block maybe
@VictorKaido
@VictorKaido Жыл бұрын
@@miguelpereira9859 rgb is useless as my shit
@IvanOoze1990
@IvanOoze1990 Жыл бұрын
But.. Dragons, and eagle wings and flames and tribal tattoo looking things are what the children want.
@Tyrion5556
@Tyrion5556 Жыл бұрын
I love the Wendell episodes because I love watching Steve have so much fun learning from and listening to Wendell.
@brandonhoover2120
@brandonhoover2120 Жыл бұрын
Significant more to cook in consumer cards, but look just as nice. Just because this is small, you’re saying that.
@1ECRG
@1ECRG Жыл бұрын
I find wearing the ESD strap around my ankle to be less of a hassle. I tend to knock things over when reaching for things with the ESD strap on my wrist. I once accidentally burned through the strap's wire with a soldering iron while cleaning flux. The wire got caught in one of the coils of the soldering iron stand, and I deservedly received much hazing from my coworkers. 😀
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
As someone with a likewise problem, tah for the tip!
@JJFX-
@JJFX- Жыл бұрын
Where do you work that's making you use ESD straps?
@TheSocialGamer
@TheSocialGamer Жыл бұрын
@@JJFX- 😆 exactly. I've been building computers since the 80's I think I used that thing like once. 😆 I guess since I never built a PC on a carpet or plastic floors. 😆😆😆
@Doom2pro
@Doom2pro Жыл бұрын
You can get esd straps that have alligator clips on both ends, one to your ground and one to a lucky nipple 😉
@1ECRG
@1ECRG Жыл бұрын
@@TheSocialGamer I didn't say I used ESD straps to build computers. I worked on radar when in the military and now repair sensitive electronics equipment.
@volvagia6860
@volvagia6860 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Steve, Wendell, and the GN crew. I have had an extremely rough day and this really helped turn it around! You all are awesome!
@truetierra
@truetierra Жыл бұрын
Yay! More Wendell colabs. You two together present really well.
@ZenStrive52
@ZenStrive52 Жыл бұрын
Wendell is a highly demanded cameo celebrity now. Good for him!
@benjaminoechsli1941
@benjaminoechsli1941 Жыл бұрын
Congrats, you got the most convincing bot comment I've ever seen.
@TrueBark
@TrueBark Жыл бұрын
Really loving every Wendell collaboration. He is like Anthony from LTT, extremely knowledgeable and super kind!
@DroidX143
@DroidX143 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they both have awesome personalities!
@Mr.Leeroy
@Mr.Leeroy Жыл бұрын
may be the other way around? Because Wendell's been around a sh1t lot longer..
@AvroBellow
@AvroBellow Жыл бұрын
Wendell: Why can't I have a 4 kilobit-wide memory bus on my video card? Me: Hey Wendell, wanna see my old R9 Fury? 🤣
@watercannonscollaboration2281
@watercannonscollaboration2281 Жыл бұрын
14:31 the great irony in the Radeon VII is that it would live on to be one of the best mining cards
@cockatoo010
@cockatoo010 Жыл бұрын
GCN is insanely good at computing. Not so much at gaming, which is the reason why AMD based CDNA on GCN and made RDNA pretty much from scratch
@Pumciusz
@Pumciusz Жыл бұрын
Wasn't it also easily killed by it?
@TheOriginalFaxon
@TheOriginalFaxon Жыл бұрын
@@cockatoo010 Yea I remember even way back AMD's always been able to put out some absolutely monster compute architectures, with the only thing holding them back being nvidia's dominance with CUDA, and how much longer it took for openCL to become mainstream enough to get serious traction. I guess when you find a niche that works though, you might as well exploit it, and AMD certainly has been doing that with these cards. RDNA on the flipside of it has been killing it for gaming performance/watt compared to nvidia, excited to see what the upcoming GPU release truly holds
@dashtesla
@dashtesla Жыл бұрын
Typing this comment using a Radeon VII :)
@ProjectPhysX
@ProjectPhysX Жыл бұрын
We bought 10 Radeon VII back in the day for computational fluid dynamics, where you need a lot of memory and fast memory. From the theoretical 1024GB/s you get maybe 600GB/s in practice, but that is still way faster and cheaper than Nvidia cards at the time. Plus, the Radeon VII can do ~3.5 TFLOPs/s FP64 compute. None of the Nvidia cards can do that, except the ones for >$10k.
@daviddouillet4138
@daviddouillet4138 Жыл бұрын
You guys are my primary source of tech info (GN+LVL1). Great to see the 2 of you dissecting that compute monster.
@emu071981
@emu071981 Жыл бұрын
That is a speaker and I know this because it has "SPK1" silkscreened next to it lol The component marked "1L0" may be a ultralow ohmic resistor used for current detection - it is in the right area for it.
@jeroenk3570
@jeroenk3570 Жыл бұрын
I believe the "bridges" are current sense resistors and the speaker is a speaker, because it says SP on the silkscreen (and it looks like a little piezo speaker).
@Apollo-Computers
@Apollo-Computers Жыл бұрын
Looks just like the beap speakers on my z390 and z590 Dark mobos.
@Mike-tr8zy
@Mike-tr8zy Жыл бұрын
I love the collab videos with Wendell, brings out the best of you Steve. Take care
@DrakkarCalethiel
@DrakkarCalethiel Жыл бұрын
The teardown we all waited for! That GPU has more decoupling caps behind the DIE than a typical "consumer" GPU on the whole board. What a beast of a card!
@HB-622A
@HB-622A Жыл бұрын
The comment about "the next Stable Diffusion" got me thinking. Would it be feasible to add some sort of AI benchmark to future GPU reviews? With models like SD it's becoming practical for non-professionals to play around with AI on consumer gaming hardware, and it'd be interesting to see comparisons. It'd be neat to have a chart for something like iterations per second, for a standardized test with fixed dimensions, prompt, sampler, and seeds. Maybe the GPU reviews already have too much going on to fit that in though, especially since I'm not sure if there's anybody on the team familiar with that sort of thing.
@tanmaypanadi1414
@tanmaypanadi1414 Жыл бұрын
That could be tough . but if someone made something like Puget bench that would be awesome.
@HB-622A
@HB-622A Жыл бұрын
@@tanmaypanadi1414 It'd definitely be tough. It's not polished, it's changing quickly, and it can be tricky to get working properly. For one thing I don't even know whether things like ROCm support for the 7900 GPUs would be available at the time GN would be doing a review, or if it'd arrive later.
@idhalaralbaiesh5429
@idhalaralbaiesh5429 Жыл бұрын
Really impressive piece of tech and engineering. Thanks for showin! Also, really love your collaborations.
@mosamaster
@mosamaster Жыл бұрын
Wendell should be there in as many videos as possible. He is a brainiac.
@askalds
@askalds Жыл бұрын
Gamers : Haha a $25K card is totally insane Jensen Huang : Hold my leather jacket
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
Don't give the plank ideas. 🙂
@GSBarlev
@GSBarlev Жыл бұрын
Seriously. The Instinct cards are *bargains* compared to the Nvidia GPGPUs.
@Cpt_Wolf
@Cpt_Wolf Жыл бұрын
Gamers : Haha a $25K card is totally insane Jensen Huang : Hold my 18 billion dollar wallet
@BigHeadClan
@BigHeadClan Жыл бұрын
Wendel and Steve are probably my favorite duo in tech, always know its going to get really geeky fun episode but be super interesting at the same time.
@JediAcolyte
@JediAcolyte Жыл бұрын
I'm really glad to see these collaborations with L1Techs (Wendell) and you guys branching out in to some non-gaming things. Your perspective is always welcome!
@Dia1Up
@Dia1Up Жыл бұрын
As a Vega owner, it's interesting to see how incredible it is at actual computer tasks..... And how often I don't even come near to any actual compute tasks heh
@BlissfulBasilisk
@BlissfulBasilisk Жыл бұрын
I love videos with Wendell! Wild to see the bleeding edge tech to come out
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
This! Nowt like a co-lab with Wendell to restore the jaded Steve and Audience!
@infin1ty850
@infin1ty850 Жыл бұрын
Holy fuck, that is an incredible card
@sidichochase
@sidichochase Жыл бұрын
"bridges" are current shunt resistors, 4 terminal for kelvin connection. Probably a few milliohm at most.
@ProjectPhysX
@ProjectPhysX Жыл бұрын
13:08 in theory 1638GB/s, but in practice you can get maybe 800-900GB/s max, similar to a 3080 Ti. I'm using these for computational fluid dynamics, an application where you need as much VRAM as possible. On a single server with 8 MI200 GPUs (512GB VRAM) I can pull off simulations with 10 billion grid points, 10x what NASA does on 27000 GPUs. The software makes the difference.
@qyoinqyuri
@qyoinqyuri Жыл бұрын
Houdini?
@ProjectPhysX
@ProjectPhysX Жыл бұрын
@@qyoinqyuri no, my own software, FluidX3D
@JorgeForge
@JorgeForge Жыл бұрын
1638GB/s is max bandwith, not counting CRC, signal encoding and such. There's lots of stuff going on behind to ensure signal and data integrity and it reduces how much actuall data can be moved. Manufacturer's like to show us high numbers.
@ProjectPhysX
@ProjectPhysX Жыл бұрын
@@JorgeForge yet Nvidia GPUs deliver 100% of the advertised bandwidth with coalesced access, full 1555 GB/s on the A100 40GB.
@JorgeForge
@JorgeForge Жыл бұрын
@@ProjectPhysX That I don't know. I only know they (manufacturers) like to advertise big numbers, especially cellular operators, to show how great their hardware/services are and I learned some on how signal synchronization, data transfers and such is maintained between PC hardware. Depending on the method used it can take significant portion of bandwitha and we're not talking about protocols yet. I'm not going further with it. I don't know enough to explain more. Just a little I learned at Uni.
@paulthebeardedonedowning6820
@paulthebeardedonedowning6820 Жыл бұрын
yay Wendell everybody loves the Wends colabs and that thing is insane very interesting to see
@havacomment
@havacomment Жыл бұрын
Wendell and Steve, possibly my favorite duo on all of the internet! I have a bunch of upgrades to install in a PC this weekend and the GN mod mat with grounding bracelet is a must this time of year for me. Just thinking of walking across the room gets me all charged up with static. 😂
@Sipheren
@Sipheren Жыл бұрын
The R VII (which was pretty awesome for not gaming) was just an Instinct card anyway, this is its family.
@hyperstimmed
@hyperstimmed Жыл бұрын
I love this kind of content. I'd never use such hardware myself but seeing how it's engineered is always a good time
@benjaminoechsli1941
@benjaminoechsli1941 Жыл бұрын
Same here! This stuff is like the big brother of more average consumer tech. It's fun seeing what other markets get to play with. :D
@Helmet_Von_Moldy
@Helmet_Von_Moldy Жыл бұрын
You and Wendell are great together
@BS_Mods
@BS_Mods Жыл бұрын
Man you get to tear apart the coolest stuff.
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
Tear apart a quantum computer.
@911delorean
@911delorean Жыл бұрын
I actually remember a few GPUs that have beepers. I think they were Nvidia 8000 Series cards, when you didn't plug in the PCIe power they would beep.
@LEGOCAMARO
@LEGOCAMARO Жыл бұрын
This is what I would imagine Batman would be like “look there disassembling my one of my computer parts”.
@tristankordek
@tristankordek Жыл бұрын
Maybe you can send good quality PCB pics to AHO and Buildzoid will do PCB Breakdown. Wendell, thanks for providing the equipment and visiting GN.
@CowCatwithafancyHat
@CowCatwithafancyHat Жыл бұрын
Perfect example of why the modmat needs magnetic foil under the fabric in some of the useful areas.
@SgtRamen69
@SgtRamen69 Жыл бұрын
"Capacitor City" is actually the most accurate way of putting it, damn
@Meatsweats_o_O
@Meatsweats_o_O Жыл бұрын
had to pause. didn't know if i was just really high, or that actually said 'Collects Toilet Seats' both. noted. moving on.
@GodlikeIridium
@GodlikeIridium Жыл бұрын
5:18 "Look. There's central Park right there. The Bronx. Rossmans shop right there" "He's screaming at Apple" I laughed so hard 😂👌Shoutout to Louis Rossman, he's a great guy! Edit: Nice video! And an amazing piece of hardware. AMD rules!
@Eshir92
@Eshir92 Жыл бұрын
Love the ESD strap. you can tell how serious and passionate he is just by him useing it
@ILikeWhatILike69
@ILikeWhatILike69 Жыл бұрын
True the chances of anything happening are pretty much zero, but with such an expensive card I would take the same precaution. Honestly an ESD strap is pretty much not needed in the consumer side of things, but when you are handling expensive or handling hundreds of electronics a day it becomes a must because statistically it will happen (like in manufacturing for example).
@bobanmatic4014
@bobanmatic4014 Жыл бұрын
The moment he mentiond Louis Rossman, i knew i had to watch this. I don't even know how any of this works
@NeCrOmAnCiN85
@NeCrOmAnCiN85 Жыл бұрын
This is the entry level one
@kruppin
@kruppin Жыл бұрын
They are SMD current shunts. the two smaller pads are where they meassure voltage drop, ie current through the resistor. And the other thing is def a piezo beeper.
@reed-young
@reed-young Жыл бұрын
13:59 Wendell: "I've never seen a GPU with a beeper." Maybe the GPU is a drug dealer.
@zyxwvutsrqponmlkh
@zyxwvutsrqponmlkh Жыл бұрын
Wave soldering is for through hole components only. Surface mount components are reflowed in a reflow oven.
@-eMpTy-
@-eMpTy- Жыл бұрын
Buildzoid needs to make a PCB breakdown of this one
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
But can he put it on liquid nitrogen? ;-)
@RealLatinGeek
@RealLatinGeek Жыл бұрын
Wendell the god. Great content! On a side note, can you even call these GPUs anymore? I know even the manufacturers are doing it, but these don't have video outputs, and I don't figure they're meant for processing video, at least not in the way we usually think of that. Does the name stick just because the form factor and the general architecture (modularity, fast memory, many small cores...) is the same? Or is there a good reason not to call these something like Compute Units or whatever?
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
Godly Processing Units.
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
"Compute Units" is already taken. H(eadless)GPU might be a better way to put it.
@movax20h
@movax20h Жыл бұрын
Amount of bypass caps. Wow. It is more than even big FPGAs.
@beamsio
@beamsio Жыл бұрын
The big parts at the back are shunt resistors, used to measure current, probably by the multiphase controllers. It could sound an alarm if one of the phases faults, goes overcurrent, or overtemp with the buzzer on there.
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
Riiiiigghhtt. Thanks, but you are the umpteenth person to mention this. The comment even leads those about Crysis!
@tanmaypanadi1414
@tanmaypanadi1414 Жыл бұрын
@@stevewatson6839 You do know KZbin dosent show all comments to all people. it's just the luck of the draw. sometimes it shows up on desktop but not on mobile and vice-versa.
@RomanticNightDreamer
@RomanticNightDreamer Жыл бұрын
I see Wendell colab I click Nothing more, nothing less
@ItsJustElenore
@ItsJustElenore Жыл бұрын
There's been mainstream GPUs with beepers too. They were usually just to remind the user if they forgot to plug the PCIe power in AFAIK. There's probably more functionality for the beeper on server cards though.
@dill6078
@dill6078 Жыл бұрын
Wendell is great, I am so glad he kept doing KZbin after the whole TekSyndicate fiasco
@PPAChao
@PPAChao Жыл бұрын
First time I've ever seen someone use an anti-static wristband
@falxonPSN
@falxonPSN Жыл бұрын
Finally! Now I know how to put new thermal pads on my Crossfire MI210s so I can drop my temps in Blender by 1 degree! Thanks, Steve!!!
@michaelthompson9798
@michaelthompson9798 Жыл бұрын
Dad and son sharing war stories of computers back their day 🥰👍
@Bioniclema90
@Bioniclema90 Жыл бұрын
"yeah dad, I need this for school!"
@TarisRedwing
@TarisRedwing Жыл бұрын
Most of us will never have a use case for some of these GPU's but its very interesting to see them. Like I'll never own a Lambo but I do like to see them😎
@niebuhr6197
@niebuhr6197 Жыл бұрын
Well, because these gpus are absolutely not targeted at the average consumer.
@amiltonfcjunior
@amiltonfcjunior Жыл бұрын
I can't wait to see the teardown of the AMD Instinct MI300 that was just announced!
@icarusgeo
@icarusgeo Жыл бұрын
If Steve is like a mega-geek, this guy Wendell is a giga-geek. Fun to watch!
@Runningr0se
@Runningr0se Жыл бұрын
11:58 Those are shunt resistors. Really nice shunt resistors. Used to measure the current on the 12V connector.
@jadedandbitter
@jadedandbitter Жыл бұрын
Loved the shoutout to Louis Rossman lol
@rickvath
@rickvath Жыл бұрын
WENDELL!!!!!! *back to you, Steve*
@TPCV2
@TPCV2 Жыл бұрын
"Collects Toilet Seats", that alone raised my interest level at least 65% (Very interesting hobby!)
@William5849
@William5849 Жыл бұрын
Wendell is a treasure!
@samlebon9884
@samlebon9884 Жыл бұрын
One thing for sure about these cards is the cables don't melt
@Gastell0
@Gastell0 Жыл бұрын
That buzzer will scream like hell if GPU overheats, Mi25 have same and it's bloody loud. Also that 4 pins next to it? Fan header, and I believe it's also powered and controlled
@bubbafett2328
@bubbafett2328 Жыл бұрын
I haven’t taken apart a graphics card but I used to work at a sewing shop as a repairman and working on a $25,000 embroidery machine is a little stressful. Esd is definitely a must have for the pricy electronics
@thejo6331
@thejo6331 Жыл бұрын
that looks almost identical to a lot of AMD epyc heatsinks i've seen in the industry, down to the size of the constant tension springs. Thanks for showing this y'all!
@thejo6331
@thejo6331 Жыл бұрын
The metal ring around the CPU is to strengthen the substrate to facilitate direct-die heatsink contact.
@rata536
@rata536 Жыл бұрын
I'm having troubles to follow up the bandwidth of this whole memory stuff. How many full HD movies per second would that be?
@johnphillips4708
@johnphillips4708 Жыл бұрын
I lovedddd my Vega 64, never had a Radeon 7, but anyways, and always wished AMD wasn’t in such dire straights during the Vega development and initial launch cuz clearly there was more potential there.
@samfish6938
@samfish6938 Жыл бұрын
glad to see you Anti-Static Wrist Straps i never see them on you tube anymore
@jshanks1001
@jshanks1001 Жыл бұрын
I had a pair of these come in recently, and I was shocked to see that the shipping box clearly indicated what was inside
@ShainAndrews
@ShainAndrews Жыл бұрын
I bet you are in a constant state of shock.
@jshanks1001
@jshanks1001 Жыл бұрын
@@ShainAndrews just surprised to see a box with a label that basically says "I'm worth $50,000 if you steal me"
@alelokox88
@alelokox88 Жыл бұрын
Yeah because is common knowledge to everyone the price of those super cards, if someone steal one would probably sell it for less than a grand lmao
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
@@alelokox88 I can find out what it is and its value in thirty seconds from that info. Don't be that berk.
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
@@jshanks1001 Depends upon how it's shipped. There are couriers that deal with high value items.
@0Blueaura
@0Blueaura Жыл бұрын
Steve careful with electrostatic discharges, Wendell manhandling the card without it, no excuses. XD
@lucassfank
@lucassfank Жыл бұрын
The GeForce 8800 also had a beeper/buzzer
@Chris-vl7pd
@Chris-vl7pd Жыл бұрын
the capacitor field reminds me of simcity 2000
@eccodreams
@eccodreams Жыл бұрын
Holy teraflops, batman!
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
That's a lesser dynamic duo.
@travis8106
@travis8106 Жыл бұрын
Wendell seems like such a great dude to be around
@timjanssen2771
@timjanssen2771 Жыл бұрын
Always nice to see Tech Dad visiting!
@pirojfmifhghek566
@pirojfmifhghek566 Жыл бұрын
Tear-down? This one was a friggin bank heist.
@fleksimir
@fleksimir Жыл бұрын
Wendeeeellllllll
@Level1Techs
@Level1Techs Жыл бұрын
Confirmed :)
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
@@Level1Techs Just when I thought Americans couldn't get weirder. "Septic Tank" is Britsoldierspeak for Yank, dontcha know?
@ryanjohnson9325
@ryanjohnson9325 Жыл бұрын
Anyone else curious as to the hashrate on that beast?
@huzudra
@huzudra Жыл бұрын
Aww I need to watch this on my desktop PC so my Vega 56 can see it's great great grandchildren.
@Kev79
@Kev79 Жыл бұрын
If there's two people I would like to spend a few hours in a room with my pc. It's theses two. Their passion just radiates from them
@thericethatsmilesback5464
@thericethatsmilesback5464 Жыл бұрын
Nvidia behind the wall: “QUICK Write that down and triple the price!!”
@XiaNaphryz
@XiaNaphryz Жыл бұрын
Uhh, have you not seen Nvidia workstation/server GPU prices before lol
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 Жыл бұрын
Seconding XiaNaphryz, and they announced their "Hopper" H100 GPU with HBM3 back in August.
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
@@XiaNaphryz One of the reasons AMD wanted a strong presence in that same space. They'll never get $25,000 out of any gamer, but enterprise would not even blink.
@ElectricEvan
@ElectricEvan Жыл бұрын
Those aren't bridges, those are 4 terminal resistors/shunts. When you make a resistor that small you need to have 4 terminals to get an accurate reading on the amount of current flowing through it.
@Psychx_
@Psychx_ Жыл бұрын
It's a beeper/speaker btw. The label next to it says SPK1.
@videosuperhighway7655
@videosuperhighway7655 8 ай бұрын
We have a server with a couple of those. They are used for nuclear weapons simulation for validating physics package designs etc.. due to NTBT.
@TylerBrigham
@TylerBrigham Жыл бұрын
Ha when the esd strap bumped into all the tracked screws and they cut ahead... Pretty funny.
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