EVGA GTX 400 Series High-Flow Exhaust Bracket Review
EVGA recently announced that they have begun to sell their NVIDIA GeForce GTX 400 Series High-Flow Video Card Exhaust Bracket that is said to lower GPU temperatures by up to 5C. Lowering your video card temperatures by up to 5C for under $10 doesn't sound like a bad idea. All you need to do is remove a few screws and the bracket can be switched out quickly without having to worry about voiding the cards warranty. The question that we have to figure out is if the NVIDIA reference design exhaust bracket really that restrictive?
Interesting, I didn't think that it would be that restrictive expecially on auto fan settings. If you had your noise cancelling headphones on and ran the fan at 100% then I could see the stock bracket being more restrictive and increasing the temps more that way. Then the lower restriction of the EVGA bracket may help.
One degree drop isn't worth purchasers' buying it separately (even just for S&H), but it is worth the manufacturers' adopting the design for future use since they can do so for no extra charge. A win-win for both parties.
I have come to the conclusion that "FaceBook" should be renamed "FacePalm"
EVGA has it's own stress test program, was thinking that might be worth trying to see if any difference in numbers, also if these where done at stock speeds and auto-fan, chances are it'd show the least difference compared to a overclocked version. I know this is a bracket however and doing a review on that is quite a bit, so no complaints here, just mentioning that other factors might impact results.
I didn't expect much but I had hoped for better idle temps at least. May be better for SLI setups than a single GPU setup(considering my setup has the GPU's right on top of each other)
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I recently installed the EVGA high flow bracket for the GTX 470 and I saw a temp drop of 5 degrees Celsius overall. I can't speak for the GTX 480 users.
InspectahACE wrote:Actually, I have to ask. Were you using the Extreme Burning Mode?
In all honesty I wanted to make it the worst case scenario and if it would reduce the top end temperature at all.
Many ways to test it, but at the end of the day it took more than a full 8 hour work day just to run these tests in the chart... It is just a $5 bracket now ;)
InspectahACE wrote:Actually, I have to ask. Were you using the Extreme Burning Mode?
In all honesty I wanted to make it the worst case scenario and if it would reduce the top end temperature at all.
Many ways to test it, but at the end of the day it took more than a full 8 hour work day just to run these tests in the chart... It is just a $5 bracket now ;)
Well thanks for doing so!
I have come to the conclusion that "FaceBook" should be renamed "FacePalm"
So... bottom line is save your money. Take off the stock bracket, get your Dremel and cutting wheel, cut your own hole. Cost, $.30 in electricity and $.50 in a cutting wheel, problem solved.
I have my GTX 480 sitting in my case without the bracket like this:
Working great and I got the bracket in case I need to RMA it still...
If you wanted the free and best solution with a bracket on it then yeah, just get out the dremel and cut it up. It's free and will give you better airflow.