Optix334 t1_j30qkym wrote
Reply to comment by DMurBOOBS-I-Dare-You in AMD says a “limited number” of 7900 XTX GPUs have a thermal throttling problem | Owners of cards with throttling problems are encouraged to contact AMD support. by chrisdh79
Equate it to Nvidia issues... Which were also proven to be manufacturing problems or user error?
Weird flex
DMurBOOBS-I-Dare-You t1_j31yxce wrote
Nvidia issue confirmed to be a design flaw - there is a big difference between an engineered flaw and a minor production issue, but Team Green can't stop sucking Nvidias dick long enough for self reflection.
Sheeple gonna sheep and line Nvidias pocket back ad infinitum. ThEy CaN dO nO wRoNg!
DeBlackKnight t1_j32hkbs wrote
It's crazy how people can watch the same videos from the same handful of content creators and come to wildly different conclusions. The issue with the 12 pin connector is primarily user error. No amount of issue with the design can be used as an excuse for leaving the connector so clearly unplugged as to cause the overheating issue.
Optix334 t1_j3333xo wrote
as someone else has pointed out to you, it was Definitively proven as User Error, and a small amount of manufacturing issues where some debris was left in the connector to cause the short. Here's a nice Gamers Nexus video where they spent thousands of dollars going to professional laboratories for analysis and trying to melt the cables:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ig2px7ofKhQ
Check your bias. You look stupid here.
Titanofthedinosaurs t1_j3esd3e wrote
Nice cherry pick, its a design error that can potentially induce a user error due to the lack of proper secure connection.
Edit: https://youtu.be/ig2px7ofKhQ?t=1344 literally from the section before you linked.
Optix334 t1_j3ew9wn wrote
"It required being VERY unseated AND ALSO pulling the cable at an angle. We tested it unseated without pulling at an angle, and it didn't fail even if it was equivalently unsocketed"
I feel like you didn't listen, or you replied to me by accident because that timestamp you edited in just supports the conclusion that it was user error.
Yall really so deep in your own bias that you're trying to equate a clip that appears to be inconsequential, and was proven such via dozens of hours of testing and analysis including X-Raying the connectors, to massive thermal issues. Get real. They almost couldn't make the connector fail when they were trying. Who's actually cherrypicking here?
[deleted] t1_j31yyej wrote
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