this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2023
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This is the best summary I could come up with:
When utilized on a motherboard, the HPCE power connector resides in line with the primary PCIe x16 slot and sits behind the x16 slot where the motherboard chipset heatsink usually resides.
The official documentation recommends not to install a locking mechanism on the HPCE connector itself, since the x16 slot's built-in locking mechanism is already adequate enough to hold the graphics card in place.
The documentation does not state an upper limit, but it stresses the necessity to deliver more than 600W of power to support future graphics cards.
600W is a lot of power, but current generation RTX 4090s are already capable of surpassing that mark with modified firmware.
RTX 4090's designed for LN2 overclocking (like the HoF cards) are also capable of surpassing 600W, and as a result, come with dual 12VHPWR power connectors.
Instead, it is a modification of the High Power Card Edge (HPCE) standard that is used heavily in the server industry.
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