Good intentions, not quite the most accurate info, though...
1: AMD decided to split the power supply 50/50 between the external power connector (happens to be 6-pin in this case) and the PCI-E slot. To illustrate:
View attachment 76286
This is a problem because while the official spec for the 6-pin connector is 75W it can realistically provide upwards of 200W
continuously without any ill effects.
The PCI-E slot and the card's x16 connector have 5 (five) flimsy pins at their disposal for power transfer. Those cannot physically supply more than a bit above 1A each. The better ones can sometimes handle 1.2A before significantly accelerating oxidation (both due to heating and passing current) and thus increasing resistance, necessitating more amps to pass to supply enough power further increasing oxidation rate... It's a feedback loop eventually leading to failure.
2: AMD
cannot fix this via drivers, as there are trace breaks with missing resistors and wires that would bridge the PCI-E slot supply to the 6-pin power connector. This would make the connector naturally preferable to the current flow as its path has a lower resistance and that's the path current prefers to take. It can only be permanently
fixed by
physical modification. No other methods. AMD
can lower the total power draw and thus by extension relieve the stress on the PCI-E slot, but it will probably cost some of the GPU's performance. We'll see.
3: Buying and using this card won't kill your motherboard... straight away. Long-term consequences are unpredictable but cannot be positive. Would driving your car in first gear only, bumping into RPM limiter all the time kill your car? Well, not right away, but... Yeah. It's the same here, you're constantly at the realistic limit of an electromechanical system, constant stress is not going to make it work longer nor better, that's for sure.
The AIB partners would do well to design their PCBs such that the PCI-E slot only supplies power past 150W being drawn from the auxiliary power connector or something like that. Perhaps give one of the six phases to the slot, and the remaining five to the connector... Or better yet, power memory from the slot and GPU from the power connector exclusively. Breaking PCI-E spec that way is much less damaging due to the actual cpaabilities of the Molex Mini-Fit Jr. 2x3-pin connector that we like to call the 6-pin PCI-E power.