Gordan,
I wanted to say you've been doing a heck of a job passing on the information. Kudos for that.
I ran into this site over the weekend, read all 57 pages, and am willing to try a few things on an EVGA GTX 780 SC w/ ACX. Problem is, I'm not at all electronically savvy, so I need a little guidance.
I'm building 8 graphics workstations, and chose the 780 because some people in the group wanted to use Iray in 3dsmax, which uses the CUDA cores to render when present.
I was disappointed to learn, the 3D viewport performance in 3ds max 2014 is horrendous with these cards. To give you a baseline, the card in my current machine which is a Dell T1500 i7-870, with an AMD Radeon 4800, performs as well and marginally better than the 780 using the same exact scene / settings for comparison. I tested with an FX 580 as well, and those are 5 times slower than both the 4800 / 780. I suspect there is amazing performance available in the 780 if it can be unleashed, and the proper Quadro settings enabled.
Before I came to this site, I did edit the inf files, to no avail, and was researching soft modding the card, but quickly learned that likely won't lead anywhere. In my research, I found TechPowerUp, which had some hi-res photos of the bare video card sans any coolers. I don't know if this helps, or if it's 100% accurate as some of the traces are quite faint especially around the EEPROM, but I lightened up the file in Photoshop and created a PDF with the trace lines highlighted. I think it's interesting there are 4 main trace lines going to the processor. I haven't yet taken the time to open up my own card since I want to be sure I have the parts / tools to test / assemble the solution. When I do, I will try to take some higher res shots.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/EVGA/GTX_780_SC_ACX_Cooler/3.html I'm inclined to add on resistors to convert the 780 to a Quadro 6000. I know, 18K resistor between SCLK / VCC... I need to at least find the 4th nibble, but I'd also like to modify the 3rd nibble at the resistor and add on an appropriately sized resistor in parallel if that's viable.
What do i need to get started in testing? Multimeter? Variety of resistors to test, or a rheostat to try various resistors? But once I have a working solution with a rheostat, can i use the multimeter to determine the right resistor value to install permanently? Given the size, I'm assuming i can order some 1/4w resistors of various ohms and that will be a good kit to work with, or that rheostat i mentioned. If you could link me to a suitable multimeter / resistors and give me a few hints on how to proceed, I'll do the testing and report back.
What I need to know is, to test, I assume the card is installed in the slot and the PC powered up, so I can take measurements? I'm mostly concerned about frying the card before I get the answer.
I plan to create a bootable USB Dos Disk, so I will use NVFLASH to check what value I'm getting as I attach / detach resistors or adjust the rheostat.
Just so you know, I think the 4 traces define the ID, and I think the Red trace is the 4th nibble, but I won't know till I try. I'm hoping I can get hold of everything by Christmas, so I have something to do when i get bored. :-)
Thank you for taking the time to read even if you can't help answer. I'll sort it out one way or the other.