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AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX May Feature Faulty Coolers, Causing Overheating

So first nvidia in the heat for burning adaptersand now amd is in the hot for faulty coolers.

That's what I will call some hot mess for both of them. But it is also funny that amd first mugs nvidia for the adapter meltdown and now it turns a 360 on them self. Let's see if nvidia will mug AMD for this then.

No matter what, both of these problems are overblown. Nvidia found the problem and amd just need to fix or redesign cooler and it should be good. However if amd will not honor and rma on cards with faulty coolers, that's when we should blow it out of porpoise as that would be unacceptable.

That's why the irony is delicious.

AMD love missing an open goal, at least their AIB partners are undercutting the 4080.

Oh wait.
 
Der8auer has gone down a number of credibility points. Fair to analyse issues with four cards but to then go on and state without a hint of sarcasm that AMD has to recall all 7900 cards is overreach. I think he's full of himself.

Went from melting connectors, to melting gpu's. I expected the hardware season to be a little bit better than this...
To be fair there is no suggestion the gpu is melting. The connector...
 
Could derBauer try a water cooling block to repalce the vapour chamber? Assuming any are available to fit RDNA3.

Do all the custom AIB cards use the same vapour chamber cooling?
 
That's why the irony is delicious.

AMD love missing an open goal, at least their AIB partners are undercutting the 4080.

Oh wait.
Karma can be a bitch at times. It goes both ways.
 
If this was a design flaw it would show up on reviews.
An issue where the card can heat up more in one position, while most reviewers use open cases? That one flaw that would not be caught by someone doing the usual review.
 
Karma can be a bitch at times. It goes both ways.
What has karma got to do with any of this.

Wtaf have female dogs got Todo with anything and how.

It's the life, this is a waste.

At least shout poor Volta POOR Rdna3 with a bit of bold and vinegar, maybe red text.
 
What has karma got to do with any of this.

Wtaf have female dogs got Todo with anything and how.

It's the life, this is a waste.

At least shout poor Volta POOR Rdna3 with a bit of bold and vinegar, maybe red text.
I call it karma as amd first mocking nvidia for there problems. Now amd them self has a problem. To me that is karma that strikes back on amd.

Not that any of them are innocent, cause they are not. Far from it. In the end, it is companies that Try to earn as much money as possible.
 
That's why the irony is delicious.

AMD love missing an open goal, at least their AIB partners are undercutting the 4080.

Oh wait.

I have a reference AMD 7900 XTX, and loved the price. Don’t really see the need to undercut the 4080 though. The 7900 XTX is the clear cut winner.
 
I call it karma as amd first mocking nvidia for there problems. Now amd them self has a problem. To me that is karma that strikes back on amd.

Not that any of them are innocent, cause they are not. Far from it. In the end, it is companies that Try to earn as much money as possible.
Sorry I missed all this mocking, how dare they.
 
I have a reference AMD 7900 XTX, and loved the price. Don’t really see the need to undercut the 4080 though. The 7900 XTX is the clear cut winner.

If you are happy with your purchase that is all that matters, you loved the price too!
 
Seems like Radeon's ship is sinking fast. Not the right time for BIG trouble.

View attachment 277190
What’s the data source of this graph?

The largest online retailer here in Australia has 7900XTX cards sold out… 4080s are much more plentiful, and another A$500 more.

How do folks have A$2,500 laying around to spend on a graphics card? At that point there’s little reason you couldn’t ditch PC gaming and use console(s).
 
Sorry I missed all this mocking, how dare they.
Sine you missed it. Here is what amd Dit. They mocked nvidia for there adapter melting on rtx 4090.

 
The largest online retailer here in Australia has 7900XTX cards sold out… 4080s are much more plentiful, and another A$500 more.
That in itself is not really a bulletproof analysis, nvidia supplies a lot more cards than AMD does too.

Not denying the 4080 hasn't sold like hotcakes, but I wouldn't hang my hat on that evidence alone.
 
Seems like Radeon's ship is sinking fast. Not the right time for BIG trouble.

View attachment 277190

Intel discrete GPU had 4% ?

Did they messed up with market share vs shipment numbers ?

I can hardly imagine Intel sold 3.6% worth number of the whole market share of cards in ONE quarter

3.6% of the whole discrete GPU market share is like Millions of units.

Sticking an Arc A370 into an notebook and let it rot inside a warehouse doesn't count as market share, but it surely count as 'one unit shipped' .
 
If this was a design flaw it would show up on reviews. If this was more than a batch of cards AMD reddit would have exploded. All AIB are selling the reference Cards are all of these from the same manufacturer? Now here is the issue. Does AMD manufacture their cards in house? Did the variants that they receive for QC have this issue? Is it just overblown and in some circles being construed as propaganda. I like TPU but when one of your staff members says that Nvidia has a better software environment than AMD I wonder what that means other than the Software he likes to use. As much as we like to forget Crypto mining has way more to do with Nvidia's market share than Ray Tracing support. Then they released the 4090 and all the press ate it up. You even had PC World disputing (for weeks) that there was an issue. I watched Jay2Cents build a 12th Gen system with a 3070 for upgrade support long term.......All of this creates a situation where there was a thread that is 8 pages long on the very video posted in this staff thread. We need to step back. I am begging all PC press to do blind tests in live stream with no monitoring software with users unaware of the hardware to belie this narrative that AMD is bad and Nvidia is the only choice.

I was thinking this exact same thing. I believe @W1zzard did the reviews here for the cards in question? Even disassembled it and everything. And in the review, I don't recall anything mentioned about temps that were concerning during the tests.

I'm calling "Derb8ur"'s or whatever his name is "analysis" typical youtube clickbait until Buildzoid says otherwise. I'm not going to hold my breath though, especially given that the results are unable to be replicated.
 
I was thinking this exact same thing. I believe @W1zzard did the reviews here for the cards in question? Even disassembled it and everything. And in the review, I don't recall anything mentioned about temps that were concerning during the tests.

I'm calling "Derb8ur"'s or whatever his name is "analysis" typical youtube clickbait until Buildzoid says otherwise. I'm not going to hold my breath though, especially given that the results are unable to be replicated.
He replicated the results with 4 faulty cards that had previously been known to be faulty. Then he wisely concluded that they were faulty, so it's "obviously" AMD's fault and the whole 7900 series is hot garbage. The fact that he purposefully bought faulty cards from his fans has nothing to do with any of it. "Obviously." :rolleyes:

By the way, my 2070 has just died for no reason while sitting on a shelf, so Nvidia should recall the whole Turing lineup and offer compensation. "Obviously."
 
From what I've been able to gather, AIB cards are fine.

Nvidia vs AMD trolling right out of the gate? Classy stuff.
 
What’s the data source of this graph?

The largest online retailer here in Australia has 7900XTX cards sold out… 4080s are much more plentiful, and another A$500 more.

How do folks have A$2,500 laying around to spend on a graphics card? At that point there’s little reason you couldn’t ditch PC gaming and use console(s).

Jon Peddie Research.
 
What’s the data source of this graph?

The largest online retailer here in Australia has 7900XTX cards sold out… 4080s are much more plentiful, and another A$500 more.

How do folks have A$2,500 laying around to spend on a graphics card? At that point there’s little reason you couldn’t ditch PC gaming and use console(s).
The source : Jon Peddie Research

I 've picked one article to fact check and this is the very first paragraph :
Tiburon, Calif. (December 3, 2022) – According to a new research report from the analyst firm Jon Peddie Research, unit shipments in the add-in board (AIB) market decreased in Q3’22 by -33.5% from last quarter and decreased by -31.9% year to year. Meanwhile, Nvidia increased its market share by 7% during the third quarter.

Over $3.7 billion AIBs shipped in the quarter, which represents a decrease of $1.8 billion from Q2’22; this is primarily due to falling ASPs. The AIB market reached $31,776 billion during the last four quarters. We forecast it to be $39 billion by 2026. Intel’s entry into the market, due to the strength of its brand and position with OEMs, will create an increase in unit shipments and the total available market beginning in the second half of 2023.

Clearly they messed up between shipment and market share
Their report is based on shipment numbers, but kept saying market share in their paragraph and charts.


In their article on 30, Nov
This is how they presented their charts
Which, the chart itself stated 'Market Share' in the picture
But the description below it says 'Shipments and market share percentages'

I think this is highly deceiving.
Since people usually quote the charts only, and failed to realize it isn't the whole picture.
Untitled.jpg
 
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The source : Jon Peddie Research

I 've picked one article to fact check and this is the very first paragraph :


Clearly they messed up between shipment and market share
Their report is based on shipment numbers, but kept saying market share in their paragraph and charts.


In their article on 30, Nov
This is how they presented their charts
Which, the chart itself stated 'Market Share' in the picture
But the description below it says 'Shipments and market share percentages'

I think this is highly deceiving.
Since people usually quote the charts only, and failed to realize it isn't the whole picture.
View attachment 277280
Is the official distribution of false and manipulated information not criminal?
 
Is the official distribution of false and manipulated information not criminal?
IDK What their intension was, but their numbers can be easily debunked.

In their 3 Dec article,
Despite the '31,776 -> 31.776' mistake which, should never happen in a 'Professional research group'.

First, assume the 31.776 billion figure is correct for the whole AIB market.
They marked Intel increase from 1% to 4% in the 'AIB share'
Which translate to 31.776*1,000,000,000*0.03 = $ 953280000
That's a lot of dollars
The most expensive AIB graphics card Intel could offer is the Arc A770 = $349 each
$ 953280000 / $349 = 2,731,461 units

Lets say the market price is inflated ~$500 per card

$ 953280000 / $500 = 1,906,560 units

Are they suggesting the AIBs sold 2 million Arc A770 unit (or equivalent $$ of cards ) in 3 months ?



That is simply unrealistic and deceiving information.

Or maybe they oversimplified their data and not disclosing some key elements.




523.jpg
 
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He replicated the results with 4 faulty cards that had previously been known to be faulty. Then he wisely concluded that they were faulty, so it's "obviously" AMD's fault and the whole 7900 series is hot garbage. The fact that he purposefully bought faulty cards from his fans has nothing to do with any of it. "Obviously." :rolleyes:

By the way, my 2070 has just died for no reason while sitting on a shelf, so Nvidia should recall the whole Turing lineup and offer compensation. "Obviously."
He had about 40+ confirmed cases (talking to card owners) and from that pool get the 4 tested cards.
He had a video on that subject before the one we are talking about, and in this first video he also didn't find any problem. That`s why he got so many people reaching to him with possiable problem.
So no one need to be surprised that reviewers didn't found it themselves. They might have got a different set of GPU`s that are OK, maybe 'cherry picked' if you want to go into conspiracy's that AMD know about the problem and decided to ship anyway (must get it to holiday, don`t they?).
No reviewer was on the bad 12vhpwr adaptor in the beginning as well. In fact, after it was known many big shots try replicate the fire but didn`t succeed and the one who did invest a lot of time and effort to get there. It just show that reviewer not catching it say nothing.

There is a problem, do denying that. See the flip test.
How widespread it is is the question.

To identify the problem you must have a bad card so you want more than one to be sure.
That helps you to isolate what is the cause- not to determent how widespread it is so don`t mix it.
And by the conclusion- a bad vapor chamber design- He conclude that the issue can be a big problem out of his experience and knowledge about vapor chamber mechanics and manufacturing process.

You can argue against his conclusion - vapor chamber design problem - and suggest other cause for the irrational card behavior.
You can argue that a vapor chamber design problem is not that much of a problem and no reason for it to be a widespread issue.
You can argue that his experience and knowledge about vapor chamber is lacking.
You can argue against his test methods.
But going against the whole thing just because he knowingly buying and testing a bad GPU from users in the first place is is just wrong.
 
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He had about 40+ confirmed cases (talking to card owners) and from that pool get the 4 tested cards.
He had a video on that subject before the one we are talking about, and in this first video he also didn't find any problem. That`s why he got so many people reaching to him with possiable problem.
So no one need to be surprised that reviewers didn't found it themselves. They might have got a different set of GPU`s that are OK, maybe 'cherry picked' if you want to go into conspiracy's that AMD know about the problem and decided to ship anyway (must get it to holiday, don`t they?).
No reviewer was on the bad 12vhpwr adaptor in the beginning as well.

There is a problem, do denying that. See the flip test.
How widespread it is is the question.

To identify the problem you must have a bad card so you want more than one to be sure.
That helps you to isolate what is the cause- not to determent how widespread it is so don`t mix it.
And by the conclusion- a bad vapor chamber design- He conclude that the issue can be a big problem out of his experience and knowledge about vapor chamber mechanics and manufacturing process.

You can argue against his conclusion - vapor chamber design problem - and suggest other cause for the irrational card behavior.
You can argue that a vapor chamber design problem is not that much of a problem and no reason for it to be a widespread issue.
You can argue that his experience and knowledge about vapor chamber is lacking.
You can argue against his test methods.
But going against the whole thing just because he knowingly buying and testing a bad GPU from users in the first place is is just wrong.
What I'm arguing is that buying known to be faulty cards and stating that they're faulty doesn't give you any indication about how widespread the issue is. He's demanding a mass recall based on his sample of 4 faulty cards that he specifically went out of his way to obtain, which is complete bonkers. AMD needs to investigate the problem and issue a statement on what happens next. A mass recall based on "some" reports of faulty cards without an investigation would be unrealistic.
 
Clearly they messed up between shipment and market share
Their report is based on shipment numbers, but kept saying market share in their paragraph and charts.

This is very often in tech articles. If you "get personal" they will explain to you it's you that doesn't understand - it's "clear" that they meant "market share of the products shipped in a quarter".

And it's impossible to get overall market share from the data of shipped cards - what's the "best before" date of graphics cards? Some people retire their cards in one generation, and don't even sell them on, some people buy every two generations, and sell their old card, some people use very old cards - either bought, or are upgrading only once every few generations...

The only more or less useful market share numbers I know of is Steam Hardware Survey, and people have problems with that chart since the introduction! I wasn't polled, so it's inaccurate! It's clearly biased and it's numbers are fake! And so on... So people more or less stopped using it as a data source to create their charts on forums (due to attacks), and Valve doesn't provide very helpful visualizations - they bundle together everything - integrated graphics, laptop cards and discrete desktop cards...
 
What I'm arguing is that buying known to be faulty cards and stating that they're faulty doesn't give you any indication about how widespread the issue is. He's demanding a mass recall based on his sample of 4 faulty cards that he specifically went out of his way to obtain, which is complete bonkers. AMD needs to investigate the problem and issue a statement on what happens next. A mass recall based on "some" reports of faulty cards without an investigation would be unrealistic.
I don`s think you understand what I wrote- the 4 sample size is not what he base the recall on. It just used to isolate the problem.
And you are more overreaching with your accusation of him then him to call for mass recall- I didn`t see any demand from his side. Please show. I think you are falling into your own accusation.

See what his conclusion was and react to that, not to the mambo jumbo around it.
I will help:
"I`m not sure what will be the right move will be"
"when there is a possible design failure"
"and I guess they will have to recall"
"not all cards affected obviously"
"It seems to be a high amount of (affected) cards"
"I have a felling they will have to recall the entire MBA"

I`m sure we can all agree that if this is a widespread issue than a recall is a must and waiting for people to RMA is not the right way to go from AMD side if they are fair.
If a small % of the cards are affected than RMA will be OK I think and he did a good service to all consumer bringing it to attention.
And if it will happen to be just a very small % of affected cards than his credibility will suffer, despite him not conclusively determinate anything regarding recall.

I think the conclusion is well balanced according to the findings.
I guess people have problem with the somewhat bold headline of "AMD is in BIG trouble" but if he really wanted to entice/clickbait it he could have written something like "7900XTX cooler is a design flow - total recall of is a must". Others would have done so with those findings.
 
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