• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

MSI 3090 and loud popping sounds from PC - capacitors blown?

Soldato
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
I recently upgrade to an MSI 3090 Gaming X Trio.

I've heard two loud popping sounds (like a balloon being burst, but metallic) come from my PC in the last 24 hours. At first I though the first one was a sound effect in a game, but the second one definitely wasn't.

The PC has remained stable both times.

I've noticed the card has been running very hot in the last couple of weeks, certainly much hotter than when I first bought it, but I put this down to playing more intensive 3d games. I ramped up all the case fans to try and maintain temps under 80'C.

Is there a way to check if capacitors have blown on the GPU?
 
Soldato
Joined
4 Feb 2006
Posts
3,202
I recently upgrade to an MSI 3090 Gaming X Trio.

I've heard two loud popping sounds (like a balloon being burst, but metallic) come from my PC in the last 24 hours. At first I though the first one was a sound effect in a game, but the second one definitely wasn't.

The PC has remained stable both times.

I've noticed the card has been running very hot in the last couple of weeks, certainly much hotter than when I first bought it, but I put this down to playing more intensive 3d games. I ramped up all the case fans to try and maintain temps under 80'C.

Is there a way to check if capacitors have blown on the GPU?

Without taking off the plastic gpu cover you won't be able to see anything at all. If there are no warranty seals then it is usually quite easy to take off the plastic shroud. Check other parts of your system first like the psu and motherboard. Chances of blown caps on a new gpu are pretty rare unless it overheated them somehow.

Here's what your card looks like when cover is off...
https://www.guru3d.com/articles-pages/msi-geforce-rtx-3090-gaming-x-trio-review,4.html

And a teardown of the 3080 Gaming X trio


Careful you could void your warranty though.
 
Last edited:
Soldato
Joined
22 May 2010
Posts
11,814
Location
Minibotpc
I recently upgrade to an MSI 3090 Gaming X Trio.

I've heard two loud popping sounds (like a balloon being burst, but metallic) come from my PC in the last 24 hours. At first I though the first one was a sound effect in a game, but the second one definitely wasn't.

The PC has remained stable both times.

I've noticed the card has been running very hot in the last couple of weeks, certainly much hotter than when I first bought it, but I put this down to playing more intensive 3d games. I ramped up all the case fans to try and maintain temps under 80'C.

Is there a way to check if capacitors have blown on the GPU?
Not without taking the cooler off to inspect, you could try and look between the heatsink and the pcb and see if you see any burn marks or discolouration. A popped capacitor would be pretty obvious though, are you certain its not from your psu or any other component?
 
Man of Honour
Joined
13 Oct 2006
Posts
91,047
Could also be a loose 12v connection they can make quite a noise - and generally lead to a problem down the road even if nothing was damaged this time.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
Thanks for the replies all.
A popped capacitor would be pretty obvious though, are you certain its not from your psu or any other component?
Are you sure its the GPU popping and not the PSU?

The PSU is a 5 year old Corsair RM850X. I had a look through the fan slots and noticed a white goo covering a couple of the capacitors...
 
Last edited:
Man of Honour
Joined
13 Oct 2006
Posts
91,047
Post pics if you can - unless they are obviously damaged - sometimes components in PSUs are glued to reduce/prevent whine/hum.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
lol

Yeah it was quite an unnerving colour...

Post pics if you can - unless they are obviously damaged - sometimes components in PSUs are glued to reduce/prevent whine/hum.

Here's a picture of it - I couldn't see any obvious tops of the capacitors gone (where the cross is on top), but the goo here seems to come out of the side of one of them and spreads across two capacitors.

[edit] This looks like standard manufacturing caulk used to prevent movement of components i.e. silence the PSU [/edit]

KNYOzHv.png
 
Last edited:
Soldato
OP
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
Hmm yes according to this Reddit thread, this is normal on a PSU to to stop whine/reverberation...

So now I'm a bit lost... my gut feeling goes back to the GPU capacitors. I'm going to try and see if I can locate anything unusual if I can see anything on either GPU or motherboard.
 
Man of Honour
Joined
13 Oct 2006
Posts
91,047
Hmm yes according to this Reddit thread, this is normal on a PSU to to stop whine/reverberation...

So now I'm a bit lost... my gut feeling goes back to the GPU capacitors. I'm going to try and see if I can locate anything unusual if I can see anything on either GPU or motherboard.

Check 12pin and/or 8pin power connectors on the GPU and PSU side if modular for any signs of corrosion or blackening from arcing and/or melted plastic.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
Could also be a loose 12v connection they can make quite a noise - and generally lead to a problem down the road even if nothing was damaged this time.

Ok I've had a detailed look at everything. There is no smell anywhere, and no signs of melted plastic or scorching on the board. I reconnected the 12v connector at both mobo and PSU ends to check too.

GPU also looks fine, no smell, nothing leaking.

The only visible thing that looks a bit unusual is a faint bit of shiny/oily residue (10mm wide patch) on the motherboard, just below the peripherals block and above the top PCI slot. It is around an unused chassis fan connector. I touched it and it doesn't smell. If this is a leak from somewhere, it could be one of the capacitors under the peripherals block, but it doesn't seem big enough.

Bit of a mystery.
 
Associate
Joined
6 Nov 2020
Posts
78
Is your GPU overclocked? Seems strange you are struggling to keep an MSI Trio under 80C without ramping up all the case fans... Benchmark software possibly but not playing normal games surely?
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
8 Feb 2004
Posts
3,703
Location
London
I heard the exact same noise again this afternoon... yet the PC is still operating fine.

Is your GPU overclocked? Seems strange you are struggling to keep an MSI Trio under 80C without ramping up all the case fans... Benchmark software possibly but not playing normal games surely?

I had MSI afterburner installed, but pretty sure it was on default settings... I installed it to monitor the fan speed whilst gaming, not to apply any overclock. Unless afterburner's default settings are to overclock? Regardless, I've just uninstalled it now.
 
Associate
Joined
6 Nov 2020
Posts
78
I heard the exact same noise again this afternoon... yet the PC is still operating fine.

I had MSI afterburner installed, but pretty sure it was on default settings... I installed it to monitor the fan speed whilst gaming, not to apply any overclock. Unless afterburner's default settings are to overclock? Regardless, I've just uninstalled it now.

Maybe it's not the PC at all then! MSI afterburner will not overclock by default - it's one of the best monitoring software's in my opinion.
 
Soldato
Joined
12 Feb 2009
Posts
4,324
Some PSUs will produce a popping sound and it's completely normal, just a relay. Most coming time is turn the PSU on and off, but given the power usage of an RTX 3090 is can happen during normal running too.


Now if it's a bang, starts smelling burnt, your screwed. :)
 
Back
Top Bottom