Reference R9 290 + Kraken G10 with stock VRM cooling (great results)

bepo

Member
Jul 29, 2013
36
0
66
I've been looking at cooling solutions over the last week for a reference 290 I picked up off ebay for $214 shipped. The H55+G10 looked like a perfect fit however the one big issue is high VRM temps since there are no heat sinks. One fix is to get one of the aftermarket kits and attach it. The other solution I came across was for I believe a custom WC loop and involved removing the stock GPU heat sink from the cooler and using the base plate to cool the VRM and memory. Since I was unable to find anyone who tried this mod themselves combined with the G10 I decided to give it a go and document the important steps. Worst case scenario I ruin my stock cooler to where I can't use it and have to go with option 1 (apply heat sinks myself). Turns out it was a lot easier than it looks and gave great results.

Build materials, Corsair H55 and Kraken G10.


First step is to remove the stock cooler, just as you would normally.


Next remove the shroud and fan from the stock cooler leaving just the aluminum base plate. An important step here that I did not document is to make sure to only attempt to remove the memory thermal pads, do not try to remove the VRM pads as you will tear them. If you'd like you can remove any thermal pads from the base plate and place them on the PCB to avoid ruining them or getting metal filings on them in later steps.


The next step is to remove the copper and aluminum heat sink from the base plate. This is documented in more details here (http://imgur.com/a/F2bBr). I found that it was very quick to fall off when you preheat the oven to 450* first then place it in the oven. If you gradually heat the heat sink you risk expanding the copper bit, its best to apply heat as quickly as possible.


Top of base plate.


This next step is specific to the G10 but can be applied to other shapes. I measured my H55 cooler to be larger diameter than the square hole so I rounded out the hole enough for the heatsink to fit. This was done with a rounded file but a dremel will also work as aluminum is very soft. With the right tools this should be very easy to do (in my apartment is was a little more difficult).


Also a G10 specific step is to remove the circled bracket above where the PSU connectors are. This will block the G10 bracket from sitting flush and can easily be removed with a hack saw.


Clean up the base plate, remove an metal filings (important!!!) and reattach to the GPU PCB with the original screws. If you would really like to clean it up it would be pretty easy to sand down the top and apply a few coats of black spray paint (or whatever color you want). I don't really care about aesthetics so I left it as is.


The final step is to install the G10 + H55 on the card and you're done (sorry I forgot to take pics).

I found that using stock GPU settings running Unigine Valley benchmark the GPU temps never went above 52* C and the VRM temps were max 61* and 58* (VRM1 and VRM2 respectively). Compared to the stock GPU settings where my GPU temps were hitting 94* and VRM temps were 68* and 80* respectively.

GPU and VRM temps running Unigine Valley loops with my beginner overclock. This is the best I could achieve with stock voltage, I might bump it up higher but right now I'm pretty happy with the results (2700 score). If anyone has a good guide for reference 290 overclocking I'd love to give it a try and push things a little further (more voltage should be easy now with low VRM temps).


Overall I would highly recommend this setup for anyone who isn't afraid of doing a little bit of modification as it fixes the biggest issue with the G10, VRM temps. I was surprised when my VRM temps ended up better than stock but when you think about it, the 92mm fan on the G10 will give better airflow than the stock cooler fan. In total this setup can be done for under $300 which is insane when you consider the performance and improved cooling. The nice thing is the G10 fixes the terrible stock cooling and you can use the stock cooler to fix the terrible G10 VRM cooling. This is a huge performance boost over my GTX670 and one that was desperately needed to drive my new display (3440x1440 res at 60 FPS). Hopefully this guide can encourage others to pick up a cheap reference 290 used for mining and make a pretty kick ass card on the cheap.
 
Last edited:

Kenmitch

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,505
2,249
136
The core temps look higher than I would have expected. Sure it's seated correctly? Did you upload the wrong photo as the temps don't match the comments.

Revised results:

Now you can call them great results. I figured something was off on your 1st go around. Currently it's what I expected when I 1st viewed the thread....Basing my expectations on the 295x2's results.
 
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bepo

Member
Jul 29, 2013
36
0
66
The core temps look higher than I would have expected. Sure it's seated correctly? Did you upload the wrong photo as the temps don't match the comments.
Those are temps using the stock voltage and 1125/1450 MHz GPU/memory overclock, I did not grab a screenshot of stock settings.

I'm using the Corsair H55 which only has a single radiator and fan and this is the first time I've used a closed loop cooler so I wasn't sure what to expect. The 290 puts out a lot more heat than a CPU so I was expecting it to be on the high end but the GPU throttle is set to 95C so there's still 15C of headroom. If it is on the high end I can recheck the thermal paste (and grab a few more pictures) and also check my airflow.
 

Face2Face

Diamond Member
Jun 6, 2001
4,100
215
106
Nice work. As others mentioned, it seems your H55 is not seated correctly? 80C does seem pretty high for this combination. This could be due the screws not being tight enough or the plate getting in the way.

http://www.pcper.com/reviews/Graphi...0-Watercool-Radeon-R9-290/Performance-Results

Also, keep in mind you could have removed the plate assembly entirely and picked up one of these kits for $8 and have the same if not better vrm temps without all of the hacking

http://www.feppaspot.com/servlet/th...ision/Detail?gclid=CPvbvaH4zr4CFS4aOgod4l8AgQ
 

killster1

Banned
Mar 15, 2007
6,208
475
126
the nzxt rad 140mm review with h10+290 had 100c vrm temp and 54c gpu at 1200mhz?

maybe he has slower fan or needs dual fans or 140x120mm adapter to get good cfm with low db
 

bepo

Member
Jul 29, 2013
36
0
66
Thanks to those that were pointing out temps were too high. I pulled everything apart, reaplied thermal paste, put it back together and bam, max temp at 1125/1450 MHz was 52C. If I had to guess the culprit was not tightening the G10 bracket enough. THe directions say hand tighten but it's hard to get a good grip on the screws (I have large hands lol) and I most likely didn't tighten them enough. This time I was very careful and used a screw driver making sure not to over do it.

I've updated the OP but here's my temps from running the same loop. With these temps I definitely need to push the voltage and clocks a little bit more.
 

pattiobear

Junior Member
Aug 19, 2014
1
0
0
Hey OP, I was thinking about doing this to my case too, but I'm concerned how thick the GPU will be with everything. Can you post a picture of the finished product?
 

pinsala21

Junior Member
May 27, 2016
1
0
0
necromancing the thread.
Do you still have the card?
Can you please post a picure of the finished product?
 
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