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Guru3D.com » News » Bad soldering was the root cause of the bricked EVGA GeForce RTX 3090 graphics cards.

Bad soldering was the root cause of the bricked EVGA GeForce RTX 3090 graphics cards.

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 09/02/2021 08:56 AM | source: pcworld | 28 comment(s)
Bad soldering was the root cause of the bricked EVGA GeForce RTX 3090 graphics cards.

It created a storm of criticism. When Amazon Studios released the closed beta for their upcoming New World MMO, players began to claim that the game was damaged RTX 3090 graphics cards.

Amazon Studios has since removed the closed test from its website. Third-party monitoring tools reported that the issue appeared to be disproportionately affecting EVGA cards, and a preliminary study indicated that the issue may have been caused by a defective fan controller, as seen by the poor readings received from third-party monitoring tools. It was established that this behavior was not the root cause of card failures as the fan controller issue was caused by noise on the communication bus, which their software was able to filter out.

EVGA - All of the cards were earlier production run cards manufactured in 2020. Under an X-ray analysis, they appear to have "poor workmanship" on soldering around the card's MOSFET circuits that powered the impacted cards.

Following an investigation, the company has established that the bricked cards were the result of a soldering error that affected a batch of cards. A selection of faulty cards returned to EVGA were subjected to X-ray examination, which revealed that the soldering surrounding the MOSFET circuits had been performed with "poor craftsmanship." The wording is a little weird, as that is an automated process, managed by SMT guns. 

This issue was present on early production runs in 2020 and that it impacts less than 1% of the total number of RTX 3090 cards made by them. In addition, Amazon Game Studios on their end has included a frame limiter in New World to ensure that this issue does not recur in future versions of the game.







« Review: Innogrit IG5236 controller makes Plextor M10P 2TB NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSD blazingly fast · Bad soldering was the root cause of the bricked EVGA GeForce RTX 3090 graphics cards. · 2.5GbE TVS-675 NAS from QNAP is powered by a Zhaoxin 8-Core processor »

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Airbud
Senior Member



Posts: 1435
Joined: 2020-12-04

#5943430 Posted on: 09/02/2021 07:30 PM
I’ve been buying EVGA for nearly 15 or so years now simply because of their customer service.

yeah, I would trust them too right now!... this morning I read something about this only affected about 24 cards worldwide! please don't quote me on that but that seems pretty damn good if you ask me....only 24?

Apparently they sold those 24 to everyone with a Bullhorn shouting at the sky.

Once again, I could be wrong about that number and please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.

In fact, EVGA is the first brand I look for when I buy a new video card from NVIDIA

Love my 5 year old PNY too!

Venix
Senior Member



Posts: 2467
Joined: 2016-08-01

#5943434 Posted on: 09/02/2021 07:42 PM
Gigabyte's fault clearly.


You get gigabyte when you want explosive performance

MountainLynx
Senior Member



Posts: 807
Joined: 2008-05-09

#5943516 Posted on: 09/03/2021 02:17 AM
And in an unrelated story, as a new employment perk, all EVGA employees just received free Amazon Prime for the duration of their tenure!

*This post is 100% satire

GoldenTiger
Senior Member



Posts: 168
Joined: 2002-04-04

#5943518 Posted on: 09/03/2021 02:28 AM
yeah, I would trust them too right now!... this morning I read something about this only affected about 24 cards worldwide! please don't quote me on that but that seems pretty damn good if you ask me....only 24?

Apparently they sold those 24 to everyone with a Bullhorn shouting at the sky.

Once again, I could be wrong about that number and please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.

In fact, EVGA is the first brand I look for when I buy a new video card from NVIDIA

Love my 5 year old PNY too!
They said it was 24 cards out of the batch of rma cards they tested. :)

Astyanax
Senior Member



Posts: 13482
Joined: 2018-03-21

#5943538 Posted on: 09/03/2021 06:04 AM
Gigabyte is owned by Asus, not sure where there stuff is made but it was old news Asus bought out Gigabyte long ago.


lol
no.

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