
We still don’t know how much the ROG Matrix RTX 5090 will go for, but you can expect it to be pricey. While we don’t think it will reach the half-million-dollar price point of the ROG Astral Gold edition , it will still likely be much higher than the $2,000 SRP that Nvidia announced for the RTX 5090.
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Jowi Morales Social Links Navigation Contributing Writer Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
bit_user TBH, it's taken me a really long time to warm up to PCIe riser cables. However, from what I've read it does seem clear that cables are generally better at passing PCIe signals than PCBs. So, if cables aren't "evil", then why not lean into this fact and build GPUs in a form factor that completely steps away from that of a PCIe add-in-card? So, ditch the PCIe edge connector and go with a properly-engineered cable solution, like Mini Cool IO. https://www.amphenol-cs.com/product-series/mini-cool-edge-io.html Next, build the GPU in a form factor that's well-supported by cases, such as that of a water cooling radiator, in the range of 240 mm to 480 mm. This enables it to be mounted where it can dump its waste heat directly outside. In cases that support two radiators, you can just use one spot for the GPU and one for the actual water cooling system of the CPU. The only time this would seem to be an issue is for workstation multi-GPU setups. Because those already use specialized 2-slot cards, they can simply continue doing so and we can just disregard them from the discussion. Reply
Jabberwocky79 Is your GPU brand new or is it happy to see me? :sneaky: Seriously, I can't believe we are in an age where GPUs can cost $3K plus and come with extra software to tell you if it's floppy or not. I lost interest in the absurdity and stopped reading at some point, so maybe this was answered, but how sensitive is it and what does it do if it detects sag? I've been running a 1080 for over 7 years now in a secondary machine and it has sagged the entire time. Still going strong though. Reply
ManiacMilkman A simple adjustable support "stick" would fix this problem. Could make it change colors or have it's own screen to make it less ugly. Reply
BillyBuerger bit_user said: TBH, it's taken me a really long time to warm up to PCIe riser cables. However, from what I've read it does seem clear that cables are generally better at passing PCIe signals than PCBs. So, if cables aren't "evil", then why not lean into this fact and build GPUs in a form factor that completely steps away from that of a PCIe add-in-card? So, ditch the PCIe edge connector and go with a properly-engineered cable solution, like Mini Cool IO. https://www.amphenol-cs.com/product-series/mini-cool-edge-io.html Next, build the GPU in a form factor that's well-supported by cases, such as that of a water cooling radiator, in the range of 240 mm to 480 mm. This enables it to be mounted where it can dump its waste heat directly outside. In cases that support two radiators, you can just use one spot for the GPU and one for the actual water cooling system of the CPU. The only time this would seem to be an issue is for workstation multi-GPU setups. Because those already use specialized 2-slot cards, they can simply continue doing so and we can just disregard them from the discussion. This has been my thought as well. GPUs are more powerful and for things like gaming are more important than the CPU in a lot of cases. Yet, it's still treated as some add-in card. Vertical mounted GPUs help with the sagging issue. But it doesn't address the other issue in that the cooling is also awkward and is usually setup to just dump all of the heat into the case without any real consideration for flow. My thought is that the GPU should have at least some standard PCB size and mounting holes so that the board can be mounted directly to the case just like the motherboard. With it in this position, you can have a large tower style heat sink that follows a front to back airflow in the case. If they could come up with a standard heat sink mounting that would be great. But GPUs do have soldered memory that does also need cooling so it could be more difficult to come up with some standard for aftermarket cooling solutions. A riser cable would be needed with our current standards. But if motherboards could be modified to have the main PCIe x16 slot edge mounted along the bottom, then the GPU could just connect edge to edge with the motherboard and act like one larger board. This would also mean the power connector(s) could be more like on the motherboard with larger and multiple connectors depending on the power needs. A single large 20-pin ATX style connector instead of 12 pin (plus 4 sense pins which motherboards don't seem to need but GPUs do?) . Or multiple 8-pin lined up along the back of the board which again lines up where the motherboard ATX power usually is. I've been playing around trying to build my own custom case to do something like this. A mITX motherboard plus a riser cable with my GPU mounted side by side with the motherboard and with a modified tower heat sink on it. It's been working pretty well in some of my tests. But I'm not a heavy gamer and am running pretty low end parts. It would be fun to try this with something more powerful but I don't have the money or need for that. Reply
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Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/asus-to-include-sag-detection-for-monstrous-new-rog-matrix-rtx-5090-gpu-level-sense-can-warn-users-of-a-mere-0-10-degree-shift#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com
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Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.