Puget Systems Tests Quad RTX 3090 Blower Cards in Professional Applications

Source: Tom's Hardware added 22nd Oct 2020



(Image credit: Puget Systems)

(Image credit: Puget Systems)

Regarding power, the company tested single and dual power supply configurations. The power supply of choice was the EVGA SuperNOVA 1600W P2, the most powerful consumer-grade PSU you can buy today.

Puget Systems tested OctaneBench 2020.1.5, V-Ray Next 4.10.06, Redshift 3.0.28, and Davinci Resolve 0.92. In the first three tests, all four RTX 3090s scaled almost linearly; each GPU added 100% more performance. However, Davinci Resolve had issues scaling beyond three GPUs. With two GPUs, it only gained 40% more performance; with three GPUs, it topped out at 175% extra performance compared to a single card. Adding a fourth RTX 3090 yielded no performance increase. Puget Systems believes this could be an issue with the ten core CPU being a bottleneck, as Davinci Resolve uses a lot of resources from the CPU.

RTX 3090, single, dual, triple, quad OctaneBench Graph (Image credit: Puget Systems)

Puget Systems tested several power configurations for the system. One configuration consisted of a single EVGA 1600W PSU, another had a 300W power limit set on all four GPUs, and finally, a dual-PSU setup was used with the 3090’s power limits set at default. Surprisingly, in all the tests, the single PSU + 300W power limit setup was only a few percent slower than the dual-PSU and single-PSU setups.

With four GPUs, the power draw almost hit 1600W on EVGA’s SuperNOVA unit. Puget Systems measured a max of 1,580W for the single-PSU setup. 

For the setup with a single PSU and the 300W power limit set on the 3090s, power draw dropped by 200W down to around 1362W, with Octane Bench being an exception because it pushed up to 1,467W. If you want to run four-way 3090s yourself, we’d definitely recommend running a dual-PSU setup (or a bigger PSU) or using the 300W power limit – power supplies tend to last much longer when they are not pushed to their limits.

Surprisingly the blower cards did a superb job of keeping the cards cool. Average temperatures were 74C for three of the top cards, while the bottom card was a whopping 10C cooler at 66C. The company also tested single-, dual-, and triple-card setups, and all had similar temperatures. The single and dual configs were especially cool, with temperatures hitting the high 60’s as an average.

However, fan noise was a problem. Puget Systems provided an audio test with single-, dual-, triple-, and quad-3090 setups. Naturally, the system was very loud with four 3090’s under load.

This was a really cool test; Puget Systems showcased perfectly how well multiple 3090s work together in a workstation environment. Four-way 3090s scaled beautifully In most of the benchmarks, so if you have $6,000 to spend on RTX 3090s and you use programs that can scale, having a setup like this could be amazing for getting work done very quickly. 

Just make sure you have a massive case with good airflow and ensure the power circuit you’re plugged into can handle 1600W of power or more. Puget Systems says it might offer four-way 3090 systems to customers, but only for “very custom configurations.” The company’s main issue is with power draw; they don’t want to risk customers blowing a breaker in their workplace or house due to four 3090s being too much to handle. But nothing is stopping you from making your own DIY workstation computer with four-way RTX 3090s, though.