roytam1 wrote on Yesterday, 13:11:
I wonder if 3.3V 7A is overkill for just single PCI slot?
Not really. It's actually the same kind of amperage the entire 3v3 in a PCI bus is spec'ed out as. The one I tried before was only a 4A 3v3 regulator (or something to that effect) and it wasn't enough. Would overheat and kill itself trying to power that Nvidia 5500FX card to the point it was entirely unusable - the 7A version feels a lot more manageable. I let the issue sit for the last two years as I did more other electronics work and put it on the back-burner until I was more comfortable in my electronics knowledge to try and tackle it again.
The bigger issue now is just the heat output. I have two additional aluminum block pieces coming in the mail to extend the piece I have with what I would describe as "fins," but that piece right now gets really freakin' hot as is. Hot enough to almost burn you if you touch it, and I'm hoping I don't need to 3D print some sort of bracket to install a blower fan on it to keep it in check. Definitely want as large a thermal mass as possible when using these kinds of linear voltage regulators.
Either way, the tantalums and the ferrite beads mixed with a large bulk cap and several smaller nF ceramics is enough to get the ripple down to the 100mV range, which seems like good enough for the Nvidia 5500FX to initialize into high graphics mode with 3D acceleration. I don't want to test it for longer sessions until I have more work done around cooling the darn thing.
Also, don't use the 12v rail on an AT system to power this. Won't work. Even if the voltage regulator is supposed to be able to take 12v (and does so off a separate desk power supply), the 12v off the AT supply is too much for it. Had to use the 5v rail to get it to even go. The 12v rail only let the 3v3 regulator get up to 2.9v under load, and 1.2v under no load (1.9v with output pin lifted). Eventually gave up with the 12v rail and went to the 5v rail without any issue so far.