NVIDIA Step-Up: Got 2 used cards!

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Whizzard9992

Junior Member
Jul 23, 2009
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Thanks to Anand and the great Leadership at EVGA for resolving this issue. I received a call from the Director of Technical Marketing at EVGA regarding the issue.

He explained to me that the first 470 arriving was indeed a mishap and that was something they are resolving internally. Sometimes mistakes happen despite even the best practices and processes. They are doing their best to ensure this doesn't happen again.

The second card was submitted as an RMA instead of as a step-up. So the reason the card looked used is because it was indeed recertified, which is what you get when you RMA your product. The card was in good condition; just not new condition.

The final card I received was indeed a new card, complete with accessories. I'm happy to say it's performing very well, and running just as hot as they say :)

Some things to note here:

• Both cards #2 and #3 were sent overnight with return shipping labels. EVGA did this before anything was really escalated.

• Cards are boxed right at EVGA in the US, which gives EVGA an opportunity to test the cards. This identifies both defects and candidates for the "Superclocked" editions. If your new 480 looks like it was installed (marks on the DVI or PCIe slots), it might have been by EVGA.

Aside:
If you want a card that overclocks like a champ, go with the EVGA SuperClocked edition. These have already been validated to perform well at speeds higher than stock. Not all cards are tested, either, so buying the vanilla edition means you could have gotten one that failed that test or didn't get tested at all. It's still a crapshoot. It's all supply and demand too, so normal binning rules apply. Either way the lesson here is the same: Buy the superclocked edition if you want to overclock.

• I was told the residue on the cards is how they come back from the factory. I'm a little skeptical about this one, since my "new" 480 had a pretty clean PCB. I will say there was a little residue there, but you had to look really hard (as opposed to the recertified one which looked dirty). Not terribly important, though, since card #2 was already verified an RMA.

• I always got someone to talk to who was native English speaker :) When you're frustrated with a product, the last thing you want to do is stumble through a poorly translated conversation. Noteworthy whenever discussing the quality of customer support.

EVGA is indeed all its cracked up to be. They maintain a high level of customer support while also maintaining competitive prices - that alone is amazing. While it did take a call from Anand to get someone to explain to me "how and why," I did end up with a new 480 at the end of the day.
 

Hauk

Platinum Member
Nov 22, 2001
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Good to hear. It was as I thought, that the 470/480 1st card was a rare mistake, and the 2nd card, while it was a 480, came from the RMA department. Granted it would been resolved for many; but, you wanted new, complete with acessories, and were justified in asking for such. They responded accordingly.

After hearing all the details, I was confident EVGA would correct the situation. The step-up program is a value add. Lifetime warranty, step-up, helpful, USA based support, many reasons they're top on our lists. And don't forget their forums, as helpful as any.

I know it was frustrating; but there's a lesson... don't take this the wrong way.. when dealing with a company that under normal circustances issues good service to accompany the product, don't suspect the worst if there's an issue, don't find them guilty before all parties digest the facts. Approach professionally, allow for professional resolve. Just speaking from experience. I'm a hothead and have worked for years to calm myself before reacting.

Good job EVGA.. way to make things right..
 

Whizzard9992

Junior Member
Jul 23, 2009
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Thanks Hauk. I appreciate your candor.

Happy this is behind me and I can play BFBC2 with the settings all cranked up again.
 

Hauk

Platinum Member
Nov 22, 2001
2,806
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Didn't you say you were going to do the step-up program? Don't you have 2 5870's?

I sold one and still have one, but wanted to play with 470s then step them up to 480s. I'm seeking help for my problem.. ;)
 

Petey!

Senior member
May 28, 2010
250
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evga is amazing. They're CS and quality employees are the reason I'll never buy an nvidia product from anyone else.