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(Created page with "{{stub}} {{Repair Guide |Device= |Affects parts= |Needs equipment= |Type= |Difficulty= }} ==Problem description== <!-- Provide a concise description of the issue here. Be as specific as possible to help readers quickly determine whether or not this is the exact problem they are facing. --> Repairing a problem on a GTX 1080Ti SC2 Hybrid from EVGA where the card is not recognized by the system but it does turn on. This particular issue was caused by a short on 1.8V rai...") |
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{{Repair Guide | {{Repair Guide | ||
|Device= | |Device=GTX 1080Ti, GTX 1080Ti SC2 Hybrid, GTX 1080 | ||
|Affects parts= | |Affects parts=Capacitor C83 22uF 6.3V 0603 | ||
|Needs equipment= | |Needs equipment=multimeter, soldering iron, soldering station, thermal camera. | ||
|Type= | |Type=Soldering, Part replacement | ||
|Difficulty= | |Difficulty=3. Hard | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{stub}} | |||
==Problem description== | ==Problem description== | ||
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Revision as of 10:05, 6 July 2024
GTX 1080Ti Not detected repair (Short on 1.8V) | |
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Device | GTX 1080Ti, GTX 1080Ti SC2 Hybrid, GTX 1080 |
Affects part(s) | Capacitor C83 22uF 6.3V 0603 |
Needs equipment | multimeter, soldering iron, soldering station, thermal camera. |
Difficulty | ◉◉◉◌ Hard |
Type | Soldering, Part replacement |
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Problem description
Repairing a problem on a GTX 1080Ti SC2 Hybrid from EVGA where the card is not recognized by the system but it does turn on. This particular issue was caused by a short on 1.8V rail. Usually shorts on that rail are often caused by a failed GPU core and is unrepairable outside of replacing the core. This time however, it was a shorted capacitor.
Symptoms
- Card is not detected by the motherboard
- Fan does not spin
Solution
Diagnostic Steps
- Disassemble the card
- With your multimeter, measure the resistances of the voltage rails, refer to this or this page for reference measurements
- You should measure a short circuit on 1.8V rail (Figure 1), if not, this guide is not applicable to your problem
- Inject 1V to the rail and see what heats up using a thermal camera or other short finding methods.
- In this case, it was a capacitor under the core (Figure 2, 3)
- You might have a different capacitor that is shorted or the core itself, if you feel the core itself is getting warm, it's a dead core.
Repair Steps
Simply de-solder the old capacitor and measure if the short is gone, if it is gone then replace it with another (22uF 6.3V 0603). Stress test the card after and reassemble.
If the short is not gone after de-soldering, the core could be dead, repeat the diagnostic steps.