GIGABYTE GeForce RTX GPUs are cracking

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Read from tweaktown:

many GIGABYTE GeForce RTX owners - covering the GeForce RTX 30 Series (Ampere) and potentially GeForce RTX 40 Series (Ada Lovelace) too - reporting catastrophic cracking on the PCB.

With the cracking close to the power connectors, the graphics cards are non-functioning and in need of critical repair or replacement. This is troubling because GIGABYTE is an established and trusted brand in the PC gaming space, which has seen its graphics cards, motherboards, and other hardware components receive critical acclaim and commercial success.

In Australia, it's one of the go-to brands for GPUs and motherboards for new builds - so a widespread PCB cracking issue is not the sort of news you want to hear about.

With several cases popping up online, the severity of the cracking varies, with some third-party investigations noting that the issue could mostly be found in pre-built machines. With the size, length, and weight of modern GPUs, which took hold during the GeForce RTX 30 Series generation, it seems that there's a significant strain on this particular area of the PCB - that might be further exacerbated by how GIGABYTE cuts this portion of the PCB, causing additional stress.

This issue has been known by PCB experts and designers for years, and one of the reasons why things like GPU sag for larger graphics cards is something you absolutely need to deal with as soon as possible. It doesn't help that PCBs themselves are thin and relatively fragile in the grand scheme of PC hardware. And with that, some are hoping that GPU makers go beyond holders and brackets and look to implement ways to secure the backside of graphics cards to the PC case it's housed in.
 
Hopefully, people who got cracked GPUs can get a full refund, and broken GPUs get recalled before people can buy them.
 
Read gigabyte is refusing warranty support for this.
 
They said it's user error and not faulty pcb design.
 
Hopefully, there won't be a need for a lengthy classaction lawsuit to get a refund or new GPU.
 
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