I know why i do not read such posts and responses.
No and No. Definitely not.
I think you misunderstood a good design principle.
You do that on the hardware level - on the component level in the firmware. Not in the userspace software.
There are some sort of microcontrollers. These are logic with functions and flash memory. That firmware and that circuitry should limit the current flow. Assuming you are not a "smart guy" who desinged that circuit. You have those parts in any power supply unit, television set, and so on.
someone was lazy designing that power circuit.
#719 - That guy is also right. Shunt mods and such. 700Watt or more over the same connector. I have a psu with the older nvidia gpu connector and i have two psu with the usual amd graphic card psu connectors. 600 Watts over such small connectors in comparision with the other connectors - definitely not to my liking.
#719 I would not give a free pass for every chips/cables/connectors
-- I have to admit something is wrong. My conclusion is a do not buy badge over all Nvidia related products.
Anyway I'm lucky that I was not affected because I did not buy Intel 13th or 14th gen processors or a nvidia graphic card.
It's sad still no solution or statement from NVIDIA. I want a real statement and no bullshit statement. I want to see actions. Real actions which solves this permanently.
During a recent press event in South Korea, NVIDIA addressed concerns about power connector safety for their upcoming RTX 5090 graphics card. The new GPU will consume 575 watts of power, marking a massive 225-watt increase from its predecessor, the RTX 4090. The previous generation RTX 4090...
www.techpowerup.com
This was bullshit and easy to see bullshit by nvidia
Nicely Whataboutism: Intel can pull around 460 Watt permanently to the cpu socket on consumer mainboards. No issues with cables on those mainboards. A big increase. MAybe it is valid to compare a intel cpu with 460 Watts with a NVIDIA 4090.