Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
So why didn't you sued their asses?
Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
gtx280 - 10% failure rate. thats pretty bad...
Originally posted by: zerogear
Originally posted by: Cookie Monster
I think i know what contributed to the mass GTX280s failing. Upon its initial release, there was a batch of cards that just overheated without warning. This problem has been fixed as of today but back then, alot of these cards were "overheating" i.e led to failures (There is a massive sticky in nvnews forums). Im not sure if this anomaly was publicly addressed. Im guessing it had to do with nVIDIA limping on the verification process of the GT200 cores, loosening on some testing/simulation procedures to get as many "good" cores for their GTX series. Since yields weren't so great back then and they required this product on the shelves (GT200 was delayed for about ~7 months), they needed as many of these to meet the demand, not to mention to compete against the competition.
Actually, most of those were loose TIM on the chip/heatsink, which a lot of people could've fixed by just taking the heatsink off and reapplying. Which is not to say is acceptable, but it wasn't a hardware failure on their part, but a manufacturing QA problem
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
Heat and power consumption can also have a huge impact on potential problems with high-end parts like this that might not have a problem in a different system. That additonal 8-pin connector and 30-50W requirement over a GTX 260 or 4870 can often be the difference between a 450W or 500W being enough or failing to POST. Higher TDP can also result in potential temp problems in cases that don't have good ventilation.Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
gtx280 - 10% failure rate. thats pretty bad...
Likely due to a higher percentage of users modding the cards (changing HS/Fan, flashing bios, overclocking the crap out of them) and causing damage. One would also have to factor in people who RMA out of disappointing overclocks (after breaking it themselves) or theft (there was a thread about bogus returns not long ago).
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
Make sure to register it next time...
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
gtx280 - 10% failure rate. thats pretty bad...
Likely due to a higher percentage of users modding the cards (changing HS/Fan, flashing bios, overclocking the crap out of them) and causing damage. One would also have to factor in people who RMA out of disappointing overclocks (after breaking it themselves) or theft (there was a thread about bogus returns not long ago).
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
gtx280 - 10% failure rate. thats pretty bad...
Likely due to a higher percentage of users modding the cards (changing HS/Fan, flashing bios, overclocking the crap out of them) and causing damage. One would also have to factor in people who RMA out of disappointing overclocks (after breaking it themselves) or theft (there was a thread about bogus returns not long ago).
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: ZapOriginally posted by: dguy6789
I had an eVGA 7900GT that they refused to repair or replace when it died.
Did they give you a reason?
They said the sticker on my card had an invalid number. They refused to accept it.
Make sure to register it next time...
The registration site wouldn't accept the serial number....
