Would this set support 4 GPUs running at PCIe 3.0 x8, 1 GPU running at PCIe 3.0 x4 and a M.2 at x4?

https://www.evga.com/support/manuals/fi ... E-E097.pdf
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I was thinking x16 risers for some of em, and 2 psus.ajm wrote:If the whole thing still is functioning properly I see no reason why not. This CPU can handle 40 PCIe lanes. You should use a set of four sticks of RAM to use its capabilities (Quad channel DDR4).
For 5 GPUs, you are going to need some really powerful PSU, though, and it will be hard to cool.
History has shown that GPU prices don't drop. A new generation of GPUs is released in a tier with higher performance levels and with higher prices. The old generation's prices may go down but not much.iero wrote:Τhe main issue is that I'll have to wait for gpu prices to drop. And by then, a better deal may have arisen.
I was talking about the price surge due to mining.bruce wrote:History has shown that GPU prices don't drop. A new generation of GPUs is released in a tier with higher performance levels and with higher prices. The old generation's prices may go down but not much.iero wrote:Τhe main issue is that I'll have to wait for gpu prices to drop. And by then, a better deal may have arisen.
You might as well plan on buying GPUs from the previous generations which have already gone through the price reduction process.
That's a manual from a different mobo, isn't it?JimboPalmer wrote:https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en ... tions.html
says 40 lanes.
https://www.evga.com/support/manuals/fi ... X-E297.pdf
PCI-E Lane Distribution (44 Lane SKX CPU’s)
PE1 – x4 (Gen3, x4 lanes from PCH)
PE2 – x16 (Gen3, x16 lanes from CPU, x8 shared with PE3)
PE3 – x16 (Gen3, x8 lanes from CPU, shares 8 of PE2’s 16 lanes)
PE4 – x16 (Gen3, x8 lanes from CPU, shares 8 of PE5’s 16 lanes)
PE5 – x16 (Gen3, x16 lanes from CPU, x8 shared with PE4)
PE6 – x1 (Gen3, x1 lane from PCH)
PCI-E Lane Distribution (28 Lane SKX CPU’s)
PE1 – x4 (Gen3, x4 lanes from PCH)
PE2 – x16 (Gen3, x16 lanes from CPU, x8 shared with PE3)
PE3 – x16 (Gen3, x8 lanes from CPU, shares 8 of PE2’s 16 lanes)
PE4 – x16 (Not functional with a 28 lane processor.)
PE5 – x16 (Gen3, x8 lanes from CPU)
PE6 – x1 (Gen3, x1 lane from PCH)
The specs do not mention 40 lanes, but it should act like one of these setups.
I can't recall my logic for picking 2x 1200W psus the other day. Maybe, number of pcie 2x8 cables?HaloJones wrote:You'd be better off just buying cheaper boards and running Linux. I've noticed little drop off running x4 in Linux although I admit I don't run crazy expensive gpus.
And do you really need 2400W? Even 4 3090s wouldn't go anywhere near that much.
Frontiers wrote:Wonder how single board 5 aircooled GPUs setup should look nowadays for not frying any of cards with their dissipated heat.
Something like caseless horizontal big open frame, with cards at PCIe x16 > 2x PCIe x8 risers, positioned safely above motherboard, with 3 fans of each GPU looking down and backplates looking up, with heated air exhausted from heatsinks long sides of each card and helped it to move up away with some 120 mm fans positioned on lightweight frame above cards and firing warmed air up with one or two fans installed over side exhausts of each pair of cards. Or even maybe these 8 fans will be redundant and heat will flow up just with convection, not sure.
Maybe, nor sure, сan't thinking something better without big expensive custom loops with few big radiators here and there in very custom enormous case with a size of refrigerator.