Monday, February 24th 2025

Unlucky Owner of ASUS ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090 OC Reports "Caught on Fire" Incident

The new ASUS ROG Astral graphics card design debuted last month, with the rollout of NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 and 5080 "Blackwell" GPUs. The flagship model—in overclocked form—is not a wallet-friendly prospect; as highlighted by W1zzard's in-depth evaluation. The "astronomically-priced" premium-tier quad-fan model is a hot property; in more ways than one—late last week, an unfortunate ownership experience was shared online. NVIDIA subreddit member—Impossible-Weight485—uploaded photo evidence, accompanied by a short story: "I was playing PC games this afternoon, and when I was done with the games, my PC suddenly shut down while I was browsing websites. When I restarted the PC, the GPU caught on fire, and smoke started coming out. When I took out the GPU, I saw burn marks on both the GPU and the motherboard." Post-absorption, initial community and press feedback posited that the problem originated with a Multi-Layer Ceramic Capacitor (MLCC), located not far from the card's PCI-E interface.

High-profile figures soon swooped in, with different theories and offers. A Team Green subreddit moderator weighed in: "not adding this one to our GeForce RTX 50 Series 12VHPWR Megathread. This looks to be a blown power phase, and not melting power connector. The original poster provided additional photos of the cable, in addition to the GPU connector photo in the post. Both looks pristine...Yes, I watched Buildzoid's video (see below), hence updating this comment...Thanks to Buildzoid for the education!" The owner uploaded another interior shot, seemingly showing burn damage on their ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR X870E HERO motherboard. The severity of this incident attracted the attention of Gamers Nexus—Lelldorianx (aka Stephen Burke) reached out to the damaged card's owner: "messaging you. We'd buy the board and GPU from you if you want to just take the cash and buy something else (or) skip the RMA process." Burke and his colleagues are actively investigating various GeForce RTX 50-series "pratfalls"—earlier this month, reports indicated that the team was already engaged in the sourcing of problematic units.

Here is Buildzoid's "Innocent capacitor blamed for ASUS RTX 5090 Astral catching fire" video coverage:

Sources: NVIDIA Subreddit, VideoCardz, Tom's Hardware, Wccftech
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39 Comments on Unlucky Owner of ASUS ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090 OC Reports "Caught on Fire" Incident

#26
Scattergrunt
Hecate91Not sure I'd call it being petty, Nvidia has been having driver issues with the 50 series as well, but IIRC it's not even a news topic here.
But there are probably enough issues to fill at least half of a bingo card. :D
Oh no, I understand the sentiment. I just don't necessarily agree with it as its definitely a vocal minority who are saying that.. I might cook up a bingo card for AMD / NVIDIA GPU launches. Could be fun.
OnasiAll jokes aside, this IS objectively the worst NV launch since first generation Fermi. I kinda thought they would be past such blunders, but here we are I suppose.
Oh absolutely agreed. I wasn't there for first gen Fermi personally but I can definitely attest to the fact that this is by far the worst GPU launch I have seen, period. I think I might be giving Intel and AMD a bit of a pass since they had some bad launches too, I just wouldn't consider them anywhere near this.
Posted on Reply
#27
Ruru
S.T.A.R.S.
OnasiAll jokes aside, this IS objectively the worst NV launch since first generation Fermi. I kinda thought they would be past such blunders, but here we are I suppose.
Fermi wasn't even bad, 480 just ran hot and that was practically its only problem.
Posted on Reply
#28
dtoxic
Neo_MorpheusLets see how many will blame the user, instead of this clearly faulty power connector.
Of course it's user error,giving money to nvidia for a badly designed product it is user error,cant blame nvidia on that one, no one foces us do buy a bad product with clear as day bad design in terms of connector,power delivery etc...
Posted on Reply
#29
MrNobodyHD
"premium" product. Steve from GN is gonna have a field day with content on this launch.
Posted on Reply
#30
R-T-B
_roman_Call the plastic surgeries! Urgent!!

RIP 630€ ASUS mainboard. That shiny, shiny ASUS mainboard needs now a new replacement plastics.

Does ASUS now use flame retarding plastics now on their shiny 630€ ASUS - ROG - HERO mainboards? Which costs 4 times of an usual mainboard? (3 times is up to debate)

edit

Did you know that flame-retardant plastics are essential for improving the safety and durability of electronic devices? They're designed to resist ignition and prevent the spread of flames, offering an added layer of protection to sensitive components like motherboards.



Note: Not a real product - check the product homepage before buying. Not a purchasable product - Fake picture - you have been warned
Darn I really wanted a piece of that flame remealing plastic...
JustBenchingIt should be less than 1% (which is the going failure rate for almost every product).
Not really. Some cpus (earlier ryzens in particular come to mind) have failure rates as high as 3-4%, and they are one of the less failure prone parts honestly.
ScattergruntOh no, I understand the sentiment. I just don't necessarily agree with it as its definitely a vocal minority who are saying that.. I might cook up a bingo card for AMD / NVIDIA GPU launches. Could be fun.


Oh absolutely agreed. I wasn't there for first gen Fermi personally but I can definitely attest to the fact that this is by far the worst GPU launch I have seen, period. I think I might be giving Intel and AMD a bit of a pass since they had some bad launches too, I just wouldn't consider them anywhere near this.
I still think Intels alchemist was a bit worse but well, they had a reason, and fixed it (mostly)
Posted on Reply
#31
Daven
Are we allowed to stop buying Nvidia yet?
Posted on Reply
#32
Neo_Morpheus
DavenAre we allowed to stop buying Nvidia yet?
Yes!

Posted on Reply
#33
wolf
Better Than Native
DavenAre we allowed to stop buying Nvidia yet?
When was this ever the only option?
Posted on Reply
#34
Visible Noise
DavenAre we allowed to stop buying Nvidia yet?
Sure, get an Intel GPU.
Posted on Reply
#35
JustBenching
R-T-BNot really. Some cpus (earlier ryzens in particular come to mind) have failure rates as high as 3-4%, and they are one of the less failure prone parts honestly.
Oh well, we can give them a pass (and the x3d going boom a couple of years back), after all amd loves us while nvidia is greedy etc.
Posted on Reply
#36
Veseleil
Asus Astral - too close to the Sun™.
Posted on Reply
#37
Caring1
Neo_MorpheusLets see how many will blame the user, instead of this clearly faulty power connector.
One of the few cards with load leveling and here you are repeating a generalization that is yet to be proven.

Edited to be less harsh
Posted on Reply
#38
Zach_01
Caring1One of the few cards with load leveling and here you are repeating a generalization that is yet to be proven.

Edited to be less harsh
Does it have load leveling though?
I think only has a per-pin monitoring
Posted on Reply
#39
R-T-B
JustBenchingOh well, we can give them a pass (and the x3d going boom a couple of years back), after all amd loves us while nvidia is greedy etc.
Intel has had high failure rates for certainn gens too. This isn't a fanboyable comment, shit happens and everyone is greedy.
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