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I know, and I appreciate the input, but the issue is that what you're trying to address is not really pertinent to the issue I'm bringing up. You're talking standards and sensible applications, I'm talking real-world, nitty gritty realities of how these standards are botched by unscrupulous people out to make a quick buck.what i tried to show you is the pertinent information to relievated your concern over the sense wires.
No, but is that an argument for not criticizing a standard that incentivizes poor implementations? I would say no.well you said it yourself, cheap. and sure i myself have seen forum horror stories of extensions, even seen seasonic pci-e connectors melt. doesn't mean it common.
Confidence from knowledge of and experience with what? Seemingly not the cheap custom PSU wiring market, given the approach here - your working assumption seems to be that there are good actors in the market, so the bad ones can just be ignored. I'm very much opposed to that line of thinking. And in order to minimize the potential for harm from these bad actors, what we need is for standards to remove opportunities for potentially dangerous shortcuts, not add more.don't confuse laissez-faire with confidence from knowledge and experience buddy.
Blatant security issue might be a bit strongly worded, but IMO it is a major design flaw when your design actively incentivizes shortcuts and disincentivizes compliant implementations, even in niche applications. That is a severe regression in quality for this standard vs. previous ones.oh my, blatant security issue??? yeah no, you are so waaay blowing this out of proportion. and i would point out that those safety features are there in part because of the prevalence of crappy extensions, adapters etc that are used for broad range of implications even though intel and psi-e sig does specify exactly how things are implemented ya know, standards. and its like you don't think anyone from intel, or pci-e sig ever shopped on newegg, amazon, ebay. . . .
How? It was brought up earlier that similar shortcuts could be done with 8-pin PCIe wiring, as those also just need sense pins shorted to ground. But I have never seen this done by anyone, ever in real life. Why? This is speculation, of course, but it's relatively safe to assume that when you're already making a harness of 6 wires, adding two more identical wires is a low-effort undertaking, and coming up with and implementing a shortcut would likely take far more effort than it would be worth. It might even look worse in the end, as 8 matched wires likely look better than 6 matched wires + a couple of bodge wires in the plugs. And, as has been central to my argument all along: these people care mainly about aesthetics.
For these cables, on the other hand, there is no real option for matched cabling (unless, as I tried bringing up as a possibility earlier that you apparently misread, you could find pins for the small connector capable of holding wires of the same gauge as the power wiring - this would let you run 16 equally thick wires for aesthetic purposes, at the cost of unnecessary wiring, exotic and possibly nonexistent pins, and a lot of hassle). You'd then need to find a way to make having four much thinner wires look good alongside 12 thicker ones. How do you do that? Creative routing and combs might help, but that is labor intensive and increases QC costs, which is anathema to these actors. Two-conductor wire of rougly the same thickness as the thicker wire might work, but terminating them in a good-looking way would be a challenge. Or you could stuff two wires into one sleeve - though that would be lumpy and stiff, sub-optimal for aesthetics. The same goes for sticking single wires into oversized sleeves - plus that they would be loose, of course. The third, and suddenly more attractive option, then becomes shorting the wires to ground at the connector. This would be the simplest, cheapest (you're now saving four lengths of wire per cable, rather than the potential two on an 8-pin), and possibly least bodged-together-looking solution of the bunch. That is a problem, when the worst implementation possible has the most advantages.
............................................. I was comparing the pros and cons of going with 16 equally sized pins vs. the solution they actually went for. Was that difficult to understand? Literally the entire basis of my issue here is based on these being different, smaller pins, ffs. I would really suggest you take a step back here, as it seems you're approaching this discussion dead-set on just not understanding what I'm saying, whether consciously or not. I'm sorry if my style of writing isn't sufficiently clear, but literally nothing in the sentence you quoted above is me saying that the pins on the standard presented here are full size.for the love of all that is holy, have you not understood a thing??? - they are not full size terminals
And I'd agree with that assessment. But I'm also realistic enough to know that people will still do so, and that people fall victim to scammers passing off $5 cables for $100 cables, but with an impressive rebate, etc. That's why standards should prioritize safety to the degree that eliminating unscrupulous shortcut implementation possibilities should be a main goal of the design. That's how you make a safe standard - by not assuming that everyone implementing it is a good actor interested in following it. Instead, what we have here is a standard that, though unintentionally, at least partly incentivizes shortcuts.i've never said anything about what people deserve and there is no place for that in a reply to me. however, i will question the common sense in buying a $5 cable for a $3000+ card.