- Jun 10, 2004
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I seem to have missed the oft-recited talking points on driver issues and I've been using AMD cards alongside nVidia cards for quite some time. My 6800XT has aged better than my RTX 3080 10GB has. I haven't run into major driver issues on either of them.
Hardware issues on the other hand... RTX 2080 space invaders - eVGA replaced this card
I had black screen/3D crashing on two separate GTX 1070 cards - Gigabyte eventually replaced these, but it took many months and the experience soured me on the brand
I had black screen/3D crashing on a Sapphire Radeon 290 which they fixed by providing a BIOS to increase default voltage by 25mV
I had a Gainward Geforce Ti 4200 which died because of the infamous batch of faulty electrolytic caps
There might be one or two other examples I might not be remembering at the moment.
There are lemons for every manufacturer. As long as the AIB makes it right and it's not a fundamental design flaw, it's really not a big deal.
IMO, the market has shown the masses continue treat AMD as the budget option even in periods when they have the superior product so the cold calculus is to invest wafer capacity in AI/DC-centric GPUs with better margins.
Hardware issues on the other hand... RTX 2080 space invaders - eVGA replaced this card
I had black screen/3D crashing on two separate GTX 1070 cards - Gigabyte eventually replaced these, but it took many months and the experience soured me on the brand
I had black screen/3D crashing on a Sapphire Radeon 290 which they fixed by providing a BIOS to increase default voltage by 25mV
I had a Gainward Geforce Ti 4200 which died because of the infamous batch of faulty electrolytic caps
There might be one or two other examples I might not be remembering at the moment.
There are lemons for every manufacturer. As long as the AIB makes it right and it's not a fundamental design flaw, it's really not a big deal.
IMO, the market has shown the masses continue treat AMD as the budget option even in periods when they have the superior product so the cold calculus is to invest wafer capacity in AI/DC-centric GPUs with better margins.