| The issue is that you are taking max GPU power draw, as a given. Running a LLM does not tax a GPU the same way a game does. There is a rather know Youtuber, that ran LLMs on a 4090, and the actual power draw was only 130W on the GPU. Now add that this guy has 7x3060 = 100% miner. So you know that he is running a optimized profile (underclocked). Fyi, my gaming 6800 draws 230W, but with a bit of undervolting and sacrificing 7% performance, it runs at 110W for the exact same load. And that is 100% taxed. This is just a simple example to show that a lot of PC hardware runs very much overclocked/unoptimized out of the box. Somebody getting down to 520W sounds perfectly normal, for a undervolted card that gives up maybe 10% performance, for big gains in power draw. And no, old hardware can be extreme useful in the right hands. Add to this, its the main factor that influences the speed tends to be more memory usage (the more you can fit and the interconnects), then actual processing performance for running a LLM. Being able to run a large model for 1600 sounds like a bargain to me. Also, remember, when your not querying the models, the power will be mostly the memory wakes + power regulators. Coming back to that youtuber, he was not constantly drawing that 130W, it was only with spikes when he ran prompts or did activity. Yes, running from home will be more expensive then a 10$ copilot plan but ... nobody is also looking at your data ;) |
I took a fair amount of time to get everything to a reduced power level and measured several llm models (and hashcat for the extreme) to find the best speed per watt, which is usally around 1700-1900 mhz or limiting 3060 to 100 to 115 watt.
If I planned it in the first run, I may got away with a used mac studio, thats right. However, I incrementally added more cards as I moved further into exploration.
I didn't wanted to confront someone, but it looks like you either show of 4x 4090 or you keep silent