When you buy GeForce GTX 690, the most expensive dual-gpu graphics NVIDIA has in their offer, you expect the best performance and every feature enabled. Well this is actually true, however it does not support the same technology as it’s professional counterpart Quadro K5000.
If the GeForce could be modified into Quadro, you would save $1000. A member of the EEV Forums did just that, because his GeForce GTX 690 would support NVIDIA Surround (multi-monitor technology) in Windows, but it would not support Mosaic in Linux, which is exclusive technology for Quadro series. What is worth noting is the fact that NVIDIA Quadro K5000 is a single-gpu card, clocked lower than 690.
In order to understand how this modification works, we have to bring up few facts. In the past it was actually very easy to modify GeForce cards into Quadro (and opposite), by changing the hardware straps on the board. These straps control the PCI Device ID, which carries the information what card is connected to the slot. So if you knew the codes for each card, you could manipulate them to emulate specific model of the card. However NVIDIA changed the way to control the ID. To change it on the GTX 690 it requires some modification to the board itself. By changing the analogue values of certain components we can manipulate the ID. The modder gave us a whole list of values corresponding to specific codes:
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 690 has an ID of 0×1188, while Quadro K5000 has 0x11BA and Tesla K10 0x118F. Long story short, it equates to 20K and 15K resistors to be enabled in order to change 690 into K5000, whereas it requires 5K and 40K resistors to transform it to Tesla K10. And that’s it.
Other users suggest that the same way can be applied to GeForce GTX 660Ti/670 to transform them into 680.
Check http://videocardz.com/40218/nvidia-geforce-gtx-690-modified-into-quadro-k5000-and-tesla-k10
Nice hack :] I'd like to see some figures on performance differences though. Got a 670 coming my way since my 660ti decided to die on me yesterday...
Can you solder these SMD's with a regular soldering pen?
nice post. i remember makin the old soldering trik back in the days, also the pencil bridge hack, when you needed to paint with the pencil between two resistances. Fun as hell.
this is old, but only for remembering.
http://www.overclock.net/t/104207/7600gt-volt-mod-with-a-pencil
Btw, no wonder that thread got removed from the Nvidia forums :D
i have the gtx 650 ti would it work with that?
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