New GeForce RTX 5090 and 5080 graphics cards are not melting cables, reports confirm issue was with RTX 4090

midian182

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Phew! Nvidia's RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 launch has not been well-received by consumers. But it briefly appeared that things were going from bad to worse after reports emerged of the RTX 5090D and RTX 5080 melting power cables. Now, however, it appears that the burn marks were the result of user error when installing an RTX 4090.

The higher power limits in the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 were always going to raise concerns that the cards might experience the same melting power connector issue that has plagued the RTX 4090.

Those concerns briefly appeared justified when Hong Kong-based outlet PCM reported (via VideoCardz) that it tested the RTX 5090D (the China-specific version of the flagship) and the RTX 5080 last week. The initial post states that the cards were tested under full load, which broke a 1200W power supply and resulted in two burned 600W 12VHPWR connectors.

Thankfully for all those who camped outside stores or paid scalpers a fortune for their new Blackwell cards, the outlet has now clarified that the burn marks were on the RTX 4090 Founders Edition. PCM added that the RTX 5090D and RTX 5080 were fine.

It seems that the problem was caused by user error. PCM says it repeatedly inserted and removed the 12VHPWR cable during testing, so it appears the cable was misaligned when placed into the RTX 4090.

The original 12VHPWR power connector has been a problem for RTX 4090 owners since the card launched in October 2022 as it can melt due to users not fully plugging it in correctly. This was sometimes due to the stiff cable bending too close to the connector, often caused by the card's size, especially in smaller PC builds. Nvidia said cases were rare, but in April 2024, a repair shop revealed that it was receiving 200 melted RTX 4090s per month, an increase over the 100 per month it was receiving the previous fall.

CableMod's 12VHPWR angled adapters were supposed to help mitigate the issue, but they were recalled due to becoming loose, overheating, and melting into the GPU.

Nvidia released the new, supposedly safer 12V-2x6 connectors in the summer of 2023. It has slightly shorter pins, meaning power won't be fully delivered unless the cable is properly seated. They are also more flexible and durable.

In other Blackwell news, whistleblower Edward Snowden just called the RTX 5000 series a crime against consumers and blasted its paltry amounts of VRAM.

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The whole purpose of a connector is to eliminate user error for safety purposes. The connector was under spec'd for what it was trying to do, over specing your part is a second line of defense for user error. If the user manages to connect it wrong, which they shouldn't be able to, the connector should still be able to operate safely.
 
This whole melting affair is a one big laugh. It is like people never plug any power cables to gpus before and now we need rocket science technology and knowlege to know how to connect those cables. Everyone try to blame users of these badly engineered graphics 😂better... Some companies released special bended ready adapters - yep...they also melt 😂
 
Maybe it'll happen, maybe it won't.

The first reported 4090 fire was about 2 weeks after they released. 5090 has only been out for 5 days now. Give it a little more time. If it never happens, great. If it does....who here thinks Nvidia will say, "User error."?
 
The 12VHPWR issue seems to be a mix of user error and design flaw, but that doesn’t make it less of a problem. If a connector fails because it isn’t seated perfectly every time, that’s a design risk, not just a user mistake.
 
This whole saga highlights how power delivery is becoming a bigger issue in modern GPUs. The fact that we’re still talking about melting power connectors two years after the 4090 launched is concerning. Nvidia clearly knew this was a problem, yet here we are with another generation where users are worried about their $2,000 GPU turning into a toaster.
 
Maybe it'll happen, maybe it won't.

The first reported 4090 fire was about 2 weeks after they released. 5090 has only been out for 5 days now. Give it a little more time. If it never happens, great. If it does....who here thinks Nvidia will say, "User error."?

Yeah plus we only have a data sample of 1000 max 5090s
I'm sure huge LLM servers have their own solutions
 
This whole saga highlights how power delivery is becoming a bigger issue in modern GPUs. The fact that we’re still talking about melting power connectors two years after the 4090 launched is concerning. Nvidia clearly knew this was a problem, yet here we are with another generation where users are worried about their $2,000 GPU turning into a toaster.
In the US, a device is only allowed to pull 1800w peak and 1500w continuous. We're getting very close to maxing out what PCs are allowed to pull from the wall. in the US, a single like is only supposed to be able to carry a total of 2100watts of power.
 
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