Originally posted by: Zim
FWIW I have considered what you guys have said and dropped any ideas about pushing for a better card. That said, I still don't see it as clear cut as some of the examples you guys are proposing.
The rule of warranty replacement is that you receive a replacement that is equal or better than the original. This did not happen for me. It was not that the replacement item was basically the same but differed within manufacturing tolerances - I received a completely different item that was manufactured with lower priced and less performing components. The fact that it bears the same model name is not relevant. The fact that the card meets the original's basic specifications is not relevant. These cards are sold for overclocking - it's right there on the front of the box "Trixx Overclocking Software Included!". Overclocking ability is as much a feature of these cards as their base specifications. I'll say it again in case you missed it - for my warranty replacement I got a completely different and lesser card than my original. That is against the law.
And it's good night from me.
Yes, it's designed for overclocking BUT there is no guarantee of a minimum overclock. That's what you're not grasping.
Sapphire's argument would be that we gave you the same exact model card and it DOES overclock. Whether it overclocks to the level of other cards of the same model is irrelevant since they have no control over such tolerances. You need to understand that you got back the same model but it did not overclock as well as your original card is a moot point since Sapphire fulfilled their warranty agreement.