You are either clueless or misguided.
Failure rates of ~2% for DOA/almost immediate failures and upwards to 5% during the warranty is completely normal for consumer electronics. There is a reason why manufacturers provide warranty after all. Failure rates of 1 per million (0.0001%) is unheard of for consumer electronics, ask any retailer or manufacturer. Personally I've RMAed a lot of stuff over the years, including many hard drives, several graphics cards, laptops and even two identical server boards which were DOA.
Consumer electronics are tested during production, and serious makers do have a basic QA procedure on every sample, usually a test run of a few minutes and a visual inspection. They usually also do a lengthy test of a small random selection of each batch. But they can't run every sample on a 2 week stress test before shipping, not only would it cost too much, but it will also cut like 3 months of the product's life expectancy, doing too much testing might actually hurt RMA rates. Most DOA products are products that have failed between the factory and the end user. Transporting products around the world is not risk free, rapid changes in temperature and pressure will cause weak parts to fail, and you really can't completely eliminate this from the factory side.
So far, there is no evidence supporting that Turing have higher failure rates than normal, In fact, according to Steve at Gamers Nexus, several board partners are claiming that Turing so far have lower than normal failure rates. So until you have evidence proving he is lying, stop spreading your FUD.