Tuesday, September 15th 2020
ZOTAC Announces Extended Warranty for NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series
ZOTAC today announced they are expanding warranty on their upcoming lineup of NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 30 series (and will include new graphics card releases as well as Mini PCs). The move will see customers who purchase any GeForce 3000 series graphics card starting September 17th within the regions of Europe, Middle East, Africa and India see the usual 2-year warranty extend to a 3-year warranty. This process is automatic - there is no need for any product registering to get this offer from ZOTAC.
ZOTAC also offers a 2-year extended warranty to any users who register their ZOTAC products with the company, thus allowing for an up to 5 year (3+2) warranty period. Products launched before September 17th, 2020 keep ZOTAC's current 2-year warranty with an optional 3-year extended warranty.
Source:
Guru3D
ZOTAC also offers a 2-year extended warranty to any users who register their ZOTAC products with the company, thus allowing for an up to 5 year (3+2) warranty period. Products launched before September 17th, 2020 keep ZOTAC's current 2-year warranty with an optional 3-year extended warranty.
30 Comments on ZOTAC Announces Extended Warranty for NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series
www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/galax-rtx-3080-ex-gamer-pink-1-click-oc.b7978
i had a 2080 Ti AMP Extreme, 1660 Ti Amp, 1060 AMP and 1070 Mini (same AMP cooler as 1060) and ALL cards had faulty fans after less than 12 months.
RMA of my 2080 Ti took me almost a quarter year to get a resolution (i got my money back -200€...)
No thanks Zotac.
I never had any hardware break on me the last 20 years, except back in the 90s, a single HDD going bad.
TPU forum this is full of customer negative experiences.
What is ZOTAC EMEA email and physical address? Where they are based in EU ?
Perhaps they finally solved their fan issues people are complaining about? Maybe this is also the reason that Zotac offers the extended warranty period on the RTX 3000 series, the cooler design is very different this generation.
Ran a Zotac GTX 570 in SLI for nearly 4.5 years, maxed voltage through MSI Afterburner (1.1V was the max if I remember correctly) and OCed the crap out of the card. Ran her like that 4+ years. When I was finished with the card I donated it to my younger brother (I replaced the TIM first and cleaned the card up, almost looked brand new) and he used it for 2 years. Still works as far as I know...just sitting in his old computer case that's had some of the hardware parted out for other things.
Zotac had a rep build up there through the 900 series, then I heard they had some quality issues with the 1000 series cards - fan problems, lots of coil whine on a lot of high-end cards, especially the AMP versions.
If (or when) I get a new GPU, I'll check out Zotac first, then Evga, if I'm going the Nvidia route. We'll see what these cards can actually do once they're released and what AMD has to offer before I toss my money at a company.
Brought it back to the retailer I bought it from and I got back a GTS 450 after nearly 1 month.
Other than that only a Palit GTX 560 Ti died but that card was used so it doesn't really count, died 1 year after I bought it. 'no warranty on it so a fancy paperweight after, learned my lesson there'
None since and I hope it stays that way.:)
2-3 years retailer warranty is the standard where I live, as long as it dies within that time all I have to do is bring it back to the shop and they will do the rest.
I have a friend who bought my previous card 'Gigabyte GTX 950 Xtreme ' for the reason you mentioned cause he belives that if a card already lasted 2-3 years it wont die on him anytime soon.
So far the card is ~5 years old and is still working fine in his PC.
All Cards are not useable due to completely messed up fans..
they spin down under load (like dropping 50% of their RPM and jumping back up)
they completely die, grinding like hell, get stuck..
If you don't like the idea that tech depreciates overtime - you're in the wrong hobby of PC hardware.
Any GPU that you have under warranty will be covered to be replaced with the same model or a newer one of similar performance - not of the same price you paid for the card originally.
In other words they have to rent property and hire Europeans so to organize their within EU distribution center.
At the price range of over 500 Euro retail for a product, it is a painful experience to ship-back something in China regarding product support.
It's not the distributors fault that new technology comes out about every 12-18 months and replaces the old.
It's not the distributors fault that pricing for one generation may be horrifically higher than the next.
It's not the distributors fault that someone paid $1200 for a card and two years later it's no longer available and a newer card of similar performance only costs around $700.
You expect a company to hold old inventory just because someone might need a RMA full filled for a piece of hardware that's 3+ years old and hasn't been manufactured for months or even years? Why would a company do that? That's just wasted resources left sitting there, giving you nothing in return. The value of that old inventory doesn't stay static as time goes on, it drops in value.
Then because they don't have 3+ year old inventory, you expect them to give you a replacement at the same cost you spent 3+ years ago?
That's just stupid.