XT and TI. 2x 8 pin vs 3x 8 pin.Not really, mate, I know a thing or two about power supplies. Which is why I ask what power supply, if it is in the last 10 years it is likely a single 12 volt rail PSU. There has been a large switch over to single rail and new topologies. He mentioned the brand, and it was a pretty safe guestimate that it would likely be single rail. Guess what, it is a single rail. Multi rail is more likely in higher capacity power supplies above 1.3kilowatt. If it has multi rails at 750 watt, it is an old design, not suited to modern systems.
Running a 5070 or 9070 of a PSU like this with adapter shouldn't be an issue as it is a single rail. As I said in the previous post, it is more about the OCP and however zealous the OCP is with regard to spike loads.
That said, his model is the first version of the series from around 2019, while there is no inherent reason why he can't run a 5070 or 9070 on it, there are other problems.
While the LLC resonant topology is pretty solid and a good design and used in some platinum PSU's, it is an older PSU so likely seen some years, so I wouldn't recommend running a 5070 or 9070 as it has derated a fair bit, which could make it even more sensitive to spike loads.
It is more an issue with the OCP being triggered by spike loads. The power draw is irrelevant as it is a single rail PSU, splitting the power draw over two connectors ports is MORE than enough for a 5070 or 9070, neither card is drawing close to 600 watts nor is the spike load that high, with the spike load being 450 for 5070 and 360ish for the 9070.
The recommendation here would be to go for a 9070 here with PCIe connectors less likely to run into issues.
But I would still rather recommend getting a new power supply regardless.
His concern is the daisy-chain. He only has 2x open PCIE cables and not 3x thus want to use +1 tail.
That is fine. Like I told him.
PCIE is a 150W cable. 70W from the slot. 5070 TI needs 300.
Old PSU's simply split the cables. They were not overrated. New PSU's do not, they are better rated to supply 150W direct + link.
Nvidia for 2 generations now don't load balance anymore. Cables as such, very important, hence his question of 2x vs 3x.
The issue is not the PSU. The issue is the PCIE cables. Nvidia knows this, that's why they made a new cable.
Hence, not recommended.
Similar example - you can daisy-chain 4x fans on the same connector. Guess what happens when you add fan number 5.
He should buy something like the Zotac which only need 2x 8 pins, which he already have


