Madcatatlas
Golden Member
And which do you think im refering to? the industry heavy machine used as a repairing tool as one of several steps to ensure the product is good to go, or the pie machine and "no problem with this card, carry on".
Baking is only temporary. It's not a permanent repair.
It is quite ethical to bake a card to repair it assuming they told him they repaired it. Again using a real baking machine will reflow solder joints if they are cracked. Assuming that was the actual issue, it would fix the card. You doing it home in your kid's easy bake oven might make it work again for a few weeks, a proper machine may repair the card for years. Honestly, how do you think they get the parts on there on the board in the first place?
Says who? Certainly not I. I've baked a few cards already going back to 6800 series. I still have and use that card. What is temporary to you?
Maybe you aren't familiar with the problem with nVidia cards that requires them to be baked. It's not that they weren't properly baked in the first place and needed to be baked again. The problem was substandard solder. Baking the card again, no matter how you do it, isn't going to correct the problem.
Well , since you asked, the unethical part in this hypothetical situationwould be to report that there was nothing wrong with it, when in fact they (hypothetically) identified a problem and implemented a resolution (i.e., a solder crack and the requisite bake).What is unethical about baking a video card?
I seriously cannot understand how someone could be so incredibly stupid to bake their entire card. (or Console for that matter) It's like using a nuclear warhead to take out an individual person. Now if what you mean by "baking" is using a reflow station to reflow an individual component that's a different story.
When it is dead you have nothing to lose really. (Assuming no warranty.)
Well, the thing is that when you bake an entire console/graphics card/motherboard/etc it will generally burn components such as electrolytic capacitors and won't thoroughly fix a crack in the solder/cold solder joint. Now if baking was the only way to attempt to repair a console/GPU then I'd say go for it; but when you can either buy a cheap reflow station or a heatgun and just heat up the affected part the bake method makes absolutely zero sense.
edit: A cheapo reflow station and/or heatgun are still very crude tools for repairing BGA solder joints. A real professional's rework station with an IR heater and X-ray photography will set you back thousands of dollars and is extremely time-consuming to use but will yield professional results. (If done correctly it may be better than brand-new if I'm not mistaken)
What is unethical about baking a video card? I would think that is a method of repair. Repairs cracks in solder points.
What is it that you claim as totally unethical business practices?
And by the way, wouldn't an intermittent short most likely be a fractured or cracked solder point in which baking would usually repair?
Really? Its a band-aid repair, eventually and sooner it will fail again.
Baking isnt permanent.
I believe Slacker has an AMD video card. I have a 8800GTS and i want it to die ever since i brought it so i overclocked to max since day 1. Unfortunately, it is still kicking so I have it folding 24/7 hoping that it will die since last year. Unfortunately, it is still kicking...Maybe you aren't familiar with the problem with nVidia cards that requires them to be baked. It's not that they weren't properly baked in the first place and needed to be baked again. The problem was substandard solder. Baking the card again, no matter how you do it, isn't going to correct the problem.
If computer parts don't dies naturally, then I don't have excuses to buy new ones. I was expecting it to die before my next upgrade at the time, which was a GTX 285. By now, it seems it isn't going to die before my pair of 460GTX goes into the scrap box.Why would you want your graphics card to die? If you REALLY want it to die send it to me and I'll pump it full of steel shot from 12Ga 3" magnum shells. 😀
Never knew how to play ebay.Planning on selling any of the cards in your scrap box?
Whatever Keys. I'm glad you think it's ethical, if that was in fact what was done. Remind me to never buy anything off of you.
Well , since you asked, the unethical part in this hypothetical situationwould be to report that there was nothing wrong with it, when in fact they (hypothetically) identified a problem and implemented a resolution (i.e., a solder crack and the requisite bake).
You're saying a hypothetical situation is unethical. One that there isn't a hair of proof for. This is what's unethical then?
Well then, it's unethical for you to say so. Hypothetically.
I'd like to hear your reasoning too.
You're saying a hypothetical situation is unethical. One that there isn't a hair of proof for. This is what's unethical then?
Well then, it's unethical for you to say so. Hypothetically.