aorus 3080 lcd screen not working manufacturer
problems consisted after a nvidia update awhile back just after the card the came out itself it seems to be just the actual nvidia drivers themselves cuasing the problems with RGBfusion cuz ive noticed after the updates the layout of there app broke even more. some stuff in the software now just dont exist
also like to mention but after you close RGBfusion its gone and you have to do this all over again just to change a setting each time my advise if your getting this card get it with a AORUS MOBO since my AORUS mobo worked fine in the beginning long story short that board died and im now on ASUS rog
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Having owned the Aorus RTX 3080 Master 12G card for approximately two weeks, I am compelled to alert potential buyers about this purchase. The initial 4-star rating has been revised to a 5-star with the VR stutter problem having been resolved. My first card, the Zotac RTX 3080 Trinity 12G, is incredibly compact and performs smoothly; it has a tasteful design that packs just enough LEDs. My second 3000 series card, the MSI RTX 3080 12G, is a rather bland card. It forces BIOS reset during installation with the x570 Taichi board that is paired with an AMD 3950x CPU. Everything sounds easy, but removing the BIOS battery from this particular board is difficult after all attempts to reset BIOS have failed. Also, they certainly make the MSI (and the EVGA) card as bland as it comes. The MSI card simply would not post out of the box with the AMD CPU although the card is a solid performer after updates. I appreciate that the MSI kit comes with an anti-tilt/horizontal support. By the way, these cards do not post when paired with the PCI-E 3.0 riser cables on AMD x570 motherboards (none of these work in vertical mount). Only the Aorus z390 Pro Intel based CPU successfully posts through the Thermaltake riser cable. To continue, the Aorus Master has the best set of features among the three cards. It has plenty of LEDs along with a generous number of output options with generous display ports and HDMI options. The Aorus Master also comes with a very useful a display panel and clocks at 1830 Mhz out of the box. Due to the gigantic radiator design, thermals stay impressively low. However, there are two important problems: 1) This card is LARGE and takes up an additional PCI-E slot whereas other RTX 3080 cards do not, and 2) VR performance is simply horrible in the first weeks of operation. I purchase the card specifically to implement VR technology on my Aorus build. However, jitters and stutters in the headset display render this card unsuitable for even simple VR titles. When I swap out this card with the GTX 1080 Ti Xtreme, graphics normalize. The visual display output feels as smooth as silk with the latter!
The most recent NVidia game update (with a clean installation) finally fixes VR headset display problems. The RTX 3080 has been released on the market for quite some time, and the 12G version is its latest and slightly augmented version. Kudos to Aorus and Zotac for having exceeded the Founder"s Edition and for pushing reliable performance to extreme thermal solution. The new RTX 3080 holds promise of solid performance in this enormous segment of VR computing and of future online interactions. After having waited for more than a year since the initial launch of the RTX 3080 and after having endured the fiasco of NVidia problematic launches, supply problems and the consumer price gouging, the transition from the GTX 1080 Ti Xtreme to the RTX 3080 12G has been frustrating. Having tried all sorts of solutions from updating BIOS (that I do not recommend), Windows, Oculus software updates to prioritizing performance manually for Oculus Applications to running a debugging window in the background, nothing worked. The fix for me (although may not be the solution for everyone) is to ensure the implementation of the game update through the NVidia GeForce Experience (not merely an applications and productivity update) with clean installation. This measure was my very first solution when the card was installed, but it did not work initially. Please do your due diligence BEFORE buying. In this case, the newer RTX 3080 cards are still not vastly better than their predecessor in VR, but at least they have stopped giving me headaches when operating the VR headset. And given the current market, factoring in inflation, the RTX 3080 12G card that goes between $800-1000 is a very compelling purchase not to mention the fact that any cards operating above this level for the current gaming industry constitutes an overkill and a complete waste of money.
PS, With an MSRP at $799 for this 12G version, DO NOT WAIT! Watch Youtube and pick the best cards for overclocking (OC) with the strongest mounting plate. Best of lucks, everyone.
Excellent circuit design with the top-grade materials, not only maximizes the excellence of the GPU, but also maintains stable and long-life operation.
Got mine in the last batch, it came next day about 5pm after the shipping e-mail. - The LCD on my Master works ok most of the time, make sure you have both Aorus engine and RGB fusion installed, I needed both before it stopped showing 55c
I"m using a 4k Dell Ultrasharp U2718Q and getting about 35ish fps when playing 4k fortnite with all the RTX stuff maxed out. reducing some of the RTX options puts it up to 60 fps quite easily. I also have a2k screen which I had running briefly but once you are used to 4k I don"t think you can go back and would say its worth moving to 4k now if you have been thinking about it. The out of the box time spy was around 16200 (i7 10700KF CPU) and I got it up to 16887 with +150MHZ CPU and +500MHZ MEM and all the fans blowing.
Enjoying it lots, looks great in the PC and glad I went for this one as the LCD definitely adds a satisfying edge, currently got it set to just show FPS and it works well, and the utility where you can add your own picture/Gif or text to the screen is easy peasy to use. I did wonder if 4k gaming with everything on full would stretch it a little bit. Unless others are getting a different experience? I"ve now backed off the overclock and just running at stock, I dont see it getting hot and its just a faint increase in fan noise when you start gaming. I will probably invest in a bracket just for peace of mind on the minor sag. Have not yet flicked the switch to see what happens when you boot from the quiet bios mode option. that may never get used !
Gigabyte’s refreshed Aorus 15G for 2021 has a subtle, all-black design that takes a page from the company’s more svelte Aero lineup of creator-focused laptops. It’s a nice upgrade, but there aren’t many other changes from last year’s model, for better or worse. It offers the same wide variety of ports (including the all-too-rare full-size SD card reader), and impressively, Gigabyte fit an excellent 15.6-inch display into a 14-inch wide chassis. But at the same time, the keyboard is cramped and the nostril webcam is awkward to use.
That kind of performance is great — and not necessarily a given just because a laptop has this graphics chip. Manufacturers can set its power level to balance performance and efficiency as they see fit. So, despite having a compact chassis, I was surprised to see it perform better with games than the Asus TUF Dash F15. It’s generally much quieter, too. Gigabyte found the sweet spot, and if you plug in an external mouse and keyboard, this machine is a blast to use.
The $1,799 configuration Gigabyte provided for review has the aforementioned Nvidia GPU, Intel’s 10th Gen Core i7-10870H with eight cores, 32GB of RAM, a 512GB NVMe SSD, a 99Wh battery, and its 15.6-inch 1080p display with a 240Hz refresh rate is Pantone-certified for color accuracy with 100 percent coverage of the sRGB color gamut. This isn’t Gigabyte’s top-of-the-line model, but it’s close. The step-up config for $200 more has the RTX 3080 and double the storage. A more affordable $1,499 model with the RTX 3060 is also available.
Even though, technically, a laptop with the RTX 3070 is middle of the road between Nvidia’s low- and high-end graphics chips, it can deliver fantastic results. Gigabyte’s Aorus 15G would probably like to credit its gimmicky built-in Microsoft Azure application that automatically optimizes performance with AI, but it’s capable out of the box with default settings. There wasn’t a huge difference in gameplay with or without the Azure app running, nor when I set the GPU and CPU to boost in Gigabyte’s pre-installed Aorus Control Center app. That’s fine by me; the less tweaking required, the better.
Getting right into game performance, Red Dead Redemption 2’s built-in benchmark running on ultra hit a steady average of 66 frames per second, dropping to just 44 frames per second at the lowest. Shadow of the Tomb Raider running at ultra settings with medium ray-traced shadows ran at an average of 93 frames per second. Bumping up the ray tracing to ultra knocked it down to 69 frames per second, which is still a smooth experience. None of these results come close to taking full advantage of the fast-refreshing screen, but older or less demanding games should be able to hit far higher frames per second.
Outside of benchmarks, Cyberpunk 2077 running at ultra ray tracing settings was easily my highlight testing the Aorus 15G. This machine had little issue keeping the game running above 50 frames per second in a more barren or enclosed environment, and it rarely dropped below 40 frames per second in crowded outdoor environments — again, that’s with the most demanding graphical settings cranked up (ultra with every ray tracing setting and DLSS on). The performance here will make a lot of people happy. I was also impressed by Gigabyte’s cooling system, which keeps things surprisingly quiet and cool under pressure. This is the rare gaming laptop you can actually keep safely on your lap while gaming.
I’m fascinated with Nvidia’s new RTX 30-series graphics chips. Not just because they’re good, but because they sometimes provide wildly different results depending on the laptop they’re in. For instance, in the MSI GS66 Stealth, its RTX 3080 delivers very similar performance to the chip inside of Gigabyte’s laptop here, even though it should blow it away. The reason is because this chip has a higher clock speed and power draw than what’s inside of MSI’s laptop.
Specifically, this 3070 tops out at a 105W power draw with 1,290MHz clock speed, whereas the 3080 in question is at 95W maximum power and 1,245MHz clock speed. In short, you’re getting a lot of power in this thin $1,799 machine. Paying $200 more for the Aorus 15G with the RTX 3080 might not get you allthat many more frames per second, as it also has a 105W maximum power draw but a slightly slower 1,245MHz clock speed. You might know all of this info, but you might not. Nvidia requires manufacturers to share it, though some of them are still being cagey about it. For the record, Gigabyte is one of the more transparent companies about its GPU specs. I’m keeping tabs on other manufacturers right here.
Outside of gaming, the Aorus 15G is unfortunately a less convincing product. It’s able to run my usual workload flawlessly, consisting of Affinity Photo, about 10 Google Chrome apps, Slack, and Spotify. Given the specs inside, I expected this. What came as more of a surprise is that they don’t translate so well to video production. During an Adobe Premiere Pro test that exported a five-minute, 33-second 4K video, it took about seven minutes each time to render.
There are several other trade-offs that might give you pause if you need a laptop as much for productivity as you do for gaming. The typing experience is fine but not helped by the cramped keyboard layout. It has a tiny trackpad, and its nostril-gazing webcam didn’t cut it for me. Also, Gigabyte claims up to eight hours of battery life, but I averaged around six hours per charge. The new Asus TUF Dash F15 excels at all things Gigabyte didn’t quite land and costs less, but its lack of a webcam is a huge red flag.
This is a fantastic machine if all you want to do is get 60 frames per second (and often, better than that) in most of your games without tweaking many settings. Doing that for under $2,000 is an achievement worthy of praise. But if you care less about mobility and having a thin form factor that Gigabyte’s Aorus 15G provides, MSI’s GP66 Leopard takes the RTX 3070 even further. Its thicker, heavier chassis affords the chip even more headroom to get better performance in games — for the same $1,799 price, no less.
I"ve finally got a new gaming computer (after 7 years of EVGA 780"s SLI) and I"m delighted it includes an ASUS Rog Strix 3080 OC as it"s far better looking than this Gigabyte lump of dull grey. The ASUS card has a Performance or Quiet switch on the upper edge of the card and if you download the software from the ASUS website, the OC Mode gives you 1935MHz boost (Performance is 1905MHz).
Gaming computer: CoolerMaster H500M mesh front, i7 10700K to 5GHz, 32GB Corsair Dominator RGB 3200, ASUS 3080 OC, ASUS Thor 850w Platinum with OLED screen & RGB, Hero XII mobo, Corsair AIO 360 Pro XT
I too have the red triangle on the LCD-panel, and "Screen setup" is missing from icue. Some boots it"s the hardware gif displayed and not the triangle. If I have a red triangle and I turn off icue it switches back to my custom set hardware gif. Should also be said that I got mine pretty early after release and the problems were not present in the beginning, this started maybe two weeks to a month back or so.
However I"ve recently discovered that my issue seems to appear whenever my PC comes back from sleep. If I turn off my PC and not let it go into sleep I haven"t seen the issue appear. The issue seems to be related to power or at least the LCD itself as a normal reboot isn"t solving it.
I"ve been in contact with the vendor where I bought the cooler and I can send it back for a replacement if I want to, but I doubt that will solve anything as this seems to be software between the LCD-head and icue. There are ALOT of people having this issue but what I don"t get, is why isn"t everyone?
With the Ada Lovelace RTX 4000 series of graphics cards slated to launch soon, Nvidia has been trying hard to get rid of excess stock by offering hefty discounts. In yet another bid to empty shelves, Nvidia is bringing back a questionably-specced graphics card, the GeForce RTX 3080 12 GB. The move comes shortly after the SKU was discontinued mere months after its January 2022 reveal.
Twitter leaker MEGAsizeGPU (via Videocardz) has learned from industry sources that Nvidia has too many GA102 GPUs lying around in its inventory. It isn"t surprising, given that the increased demand for graphics cards during the mining craze has since died down since cryptocurrencies went belly up. Ideally, Nvidia shouldn"t have too much getting rid of its GA102 stock. After all, it does power a litany of graphics cards ranging from the GeForce RTX 3090 Ti to the original GeForce RTX 3080.
The GeForce RTX 3080 12 GB is one of Nvidia"s more questionable Ampere releases For starters, there was never an official MSRP for the card, allowing sellers to charge exorbitant amounts for it. It offers an extra 2 GB of VRAM along with additional CUDA cores (8,960 vs 8,704 on the base RTX 3080), and a faster 384-bit memory bus. The bump-up comes with an increased TGP (350 Watts) and a lower base clock.
Now that the GeForce RTX 3080 12 GB is back in production, one can expect to see it sold at attractive prices. Ideally, one would be better off waiting for the RTX 4000 series for its unparalleled performance uplift and overclocking abilities. However, it wouldn"t be entirely unwise to buy a GeForce RTX 3080 12 GB now, provided that you get a good deal on it, as one could potentially have to wait until 2023 for the GeForce RTX 4080 and RTX 4070 to hit shelves.
2. Display ID updater (This is a bug affecting 3060 and 3080Ti cards on displayport, HDMI should work) JayZ did a video on this uncommon bug a few days ago.