I don't think a lot of people who watch this understand how impressive this is. Just reading schematics correctly at all takes a ton of knowledge. Not to mention the previous experience needed to understand what minimal voltage will produce the results you're looking for in a thermal camera enough to register, while minimizing potential damage to the board components by overvolting it. All that combined with similar level of dexterity to a surgeon, with just slightly more room for failure. As someone who's been microsoldering for about 3 years this is ultra impressive work. The amount of dedication into learning the craft at this level is so high. Not to mention the thousands of dollars invested to have proper equipment. I'm getting out of the industry soon, but I hope people understand this is leagues above the repair place in the mall that just swaps iPhone screens.
Yeah the seriously overpriced cards should not be having those issues in the first place u understand artifacts after leaving It on for a few years for 6 hours a day lol
You do have skills no doubt, those tiny parts cannot be easy to do, yet you do them like no body's business... congrats. What you do is what I dreamed of doing back in the day. Now I'm just satisfied in watching you do it.
I’ve watched too many video of this guy and I was able to repair my broken laptop. What amazed me the most is his excitement and genuine reaction after repairing stuff. Pure joy a true technician by heart.
im learning a lot , thanks to you sir , 3 days ago i fixed a 3090 with almost the same Problem as this one , it feels good to be student of this master work
Those Gigabyte cards are notorious for power shorts, I have repaired at least 6 of the 3060 3070 and 3080 cards in the last 2 months. That is a 1.4k card and should be under warranty not sure why they sent it to you but some people can not wait.
I can just imagine how happy that customer is going to be, just the thought of losing a 3090! Amazing Job and as always I am inspired to continue my Fix it journey.
Great videos. You gave me the confidence to try and fix my efi boot issue on my MacBook Pro. 30 mins later with a new chip installed I got it working. Many thanks!!
@Stein Mauer its not worth 2000 people mine with these gpu's this started with the 1000 series on another level back in 2017 i got my 1070 for 374usd and then it gone up 700usd after 1 or 2 months
You saved not just hundreds of dollars, but a little piece of the environment too. Guys like this needs more respect, and they should be the ones earning fortunes, not the marketing guys at GPU manufacturers, who makes the lifecycle of these products intentionally short. Huge respect!
You say magic, I say a lot of experience and thought. Top job! Keep the videos going, they are both educational and entertaining. Greetings from Munich, Germany.
I thoroughly enjoy your videos. Most of all, your excitement when the fix works is contagious. I'm not even in this line of work, I am a software developer 🤣 But after bingeing your videos for a week now, I am SERIOUSLY thinking of starting this as a hobby and see where it goes :)
Absolutely amazing! I'm just starting down the path of service technician with an A/V company with plans on starting up my own repair shop. I'll definitely be buying gear from you
I will always remember when I got GTX9800 form a friend back in the day when that card was badass. He had it in a drawer with a lots of other stuff and many SMD components were missing/knocked off because it was abused in that drawer while he was tossing shit around with sharp stuff there for a year. He put it there because one day it didn't show picture, and bought another one, and after a year or so, he gave it to me. Luckly I had similar card (someone gave me, I hoard carp) but it had burnt traces on power side of board. So, firstly, i put friends card in the owen to reflow GPU (that was the main reason I thought for friends card not working) and then I took SMD components from my card and resolder it to friends card that had missing components. Also some tiny traces were damaged from knocking off smd parts but I repaired it with thin copper wire. And after all that crap, abuse, I thought, there is no fucking way that that card will work, and then I plugged that shit in, and I saw BIOS screen. I was so fucking happy that I cannot describe. I could not afford that good card at the time, and yet I had it finally thanks to my handywork. This card worked well for 5 years for rendering and gaming, until I spill some beer on PC and fucked it all up. I will never forget that card, so yeah, I know that great feel when you repair card that was pretty much in the dumpster. I love videos like this! Keep it up!
@@arcuz7862 kinda agree but i had a Z97x gaming 5 from them lasted many years with a 4790k now is starting to fail on my old pc that i just saved and put in a box. i didnt have many problems with them.
I really love how after fixing thousands of devices you still get a FIX (pun intended) out of it. How it must be a great life to do something you love while making a killing.
Phenomenal video and work. You never explained why Gigabyte cards are harder than others? Is this the case with all Gigabyte cards in history or just the recent RTX iterations? I am particularly keen on old graphics cards...
I have a computer shop. My three guys were out in the shop area trying to diagnose a computer. I walked by and offered my help. After about 5 seconds I switched on the monitor. Problem fixed! Three guys there and none thought to check the monitor power.
From my younghood, i never had a chance for a good PC Build using Gigabyte components, so i never imagine myself buying a Gigabyte GPU or Motherboard at all, Power Supply is also plays an important role so always chose for a good one even if it would be more expensive than other brands
Good 6 1/2+ digit voltmeter should see a voltage drop at the shorted mosfet compared to the good ones @ 2-3 amps. Used a Keithley 2010 with 3amp power supply to measure resistance and their power dissipation of copper rails on a welding machine, that I repaired&upgraded once.
Super into this! I have to dead GPU that I know are if not the die a simple little solder deal and I've not got the tools, hands, funds or time for anew hobby. Interested in soon sending mine off as your work looked very strait tot he culprit and looked OEM.
I hate that unleaded solder, the stuff is crap to work with. When I was working in electronics we were forced to move over. I kept a few rolls of the old leaded solder and used it for more difficult solder jobs. I was told to stop but just hid my special supply. Pretty soon the other techs realized I still had the leaded stuff and we're always begging for my supply
It just occurred to me. Remember when PC cases came with rails on the front for extra long cards, like hard-cards? GPUs are now at the point where we need them again, because of how long the cards are.
when I replace mosfets, if it's on the Low Side, I always double check the RDS(on) value of the mosfet I'm replacing to make sure it's lower vs the High Side one .
There is always that little smile and joy when you see the screen lit up from a card you just fixed..Good job!
I don't think a lot of people who watch this understand how impressive this is. Just reading schematics correctly at all takes a ton of knowledge. Not to mention the previous experience needed to understand what minimal voltage will produce the results you're looking for in a thermal camera enough to register, while minimizing potential damage to the board components by overvolting it.
All that combined with similar level of dexterity to a surgeon, with just slightly more room for failure.
As someone who's been microsoldering for about 3 years this is ultra impressive work. The amount of dedication into learning the craft at this level is so high. Not to mention the thousands of dollars invested to have proper equipment. I'm getting out of the industry soon, but I hope people understand this is leagues above the repair place in the mall that just swaps iPhone screens.
What industry you heading into?
@@Fig35ds He'll work at a mall and replace screen protectors. Way easier job.
Yeah the seriously overpriced cards should not be having those issues in the first place u understand artifacts after leaving It on for a few years for 6 hours a day lol
You need a multimeter that takes voice orders, "METER IN DIODE MODE", "METER IN RESISTANCE MODE", "METER IN FRAPPUCCINO MODE", ...
I read them all in his voice! 😂🤣
METER IN SHORT MODE
I need tool like this🤣🤣
There is bluetooth functioned multimeter that you can show up to the screen the results .( Aneng 9002)
the subtitles say "diet mode" LoL
You do have skills no doubt, those tiny parts cannot be easy to do, yet you do them like no body's business... congrats. What you do is what I dreamed of doing back in the day. Now I'm just satisfied in watching you do it.
I’ve watched too many video of this guy and I was able to repair my broken laptop. What amazed me the most is his excitement and genuine reaction after repairing stuff. Pure joy a true technician by heart.
The number of components crammed onto that board is crazy - from above it looks like a big city photographed from the air!!
If you look carefully many pads is unpopulated.
Imagin what you would see by looking at the GPU die zoomed in.
@@ariewijaya1679 Like cities in China then
Great example by You 👍👍😅
@@worroSfOretsevraH I was about to say the same! Several billion transistors packed into such a tiny space.
I was on the edge of my seat at the end. I felt your sigh of relief when we saw signs of life. Great video, keep on doing what you doing!
yup me too
im learning a lot , thanks to you sir , 3 days ago i fixed a 3090 with almost the same Problem as this one , it feels good to be student of this master work
Those Gigabyte cards are notorious for power shorts, I have repaired at least 6 of the 3060 3070 and 3080 cards in the last 2 months. That is a 1.4k card and should be under warranty not sure why they sent it to you but some people can not wait.
1.4k card..?
@@cappyo 1400 = 1.4K
Using the IR camera and carefully injecting voltage to pin point the issue is super smart, well done sir!
I can just imagine how happy that customer is going to be, just the thought of losing a 3090! Amazing Job and as always I am inspired to continue my Fix it journey.
Great videos. You gave me the confidence to try and fix my efi boot issue on my MacBook Pro. 30 mins later with a new chip installed I got it working. Many thanks!!
The smile on his face after fixing a very expensive gpu is priceless. Very passionate guy.
@Stein Mauer its not worth 2000 people mine with these gpu's this started with the 1000 series on another level back in 2017 i got my 1070 for 374usd and then it gone up 700usd after 1 or 2 months
@Stein Mauer it was 2000 because of a shortage so yeah its coming back to normal slowly
That smile on you face makes me really happy. It's like you're a doctor and saved a patients life. In fact it is.
The smile at the end of each repair says it all for the joy of bringing devices back from the dead. Excellent repair. Thank you.
Totaly awesome, this guy is a pro! my number one channel and learning alot from you..
You saved not just hundreds of dollars, but a little piece of the environment too. Guys like this needs more respect, and they should be the ones earning fortunes, not the marketing guys at GPU manufacturers, who makes the lifecycle of these products intentionally short. Huge respect!
You say magic, I say a lot of experience and thought. Top job!
Keep the videos going, they are both educational and entertaining.
Greetings from Munich, Germany.
True! It has nothing to do with magic but rather with extensive experience.
Keep being you Alex. Love your content, learning a lot, and I don't mean only about tech.
Was at the edge of my seat when the display did not come but then I realized it was you, the MAGICIAN so I relaxed and watch you do you.👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
بارك الله فيك حسين
Best on YT.
Period.
I've learned so much from you brother. Thank you.
I thoroughly enjoy your videos. Most of all, your excitement when the fix works is contagious. I'm not even in this line of work, I am a software developer 🤣 But after bingeing your videos for a week now, I am SERIOUSLY thinking of starting this as a hobby and see where it goes :)
Absolutely amazing! I'm just starting down the path of service technician with an A/V company with plans on starting up my own repair shop. I'll definitely be buying gear from you
I cannot resist a comment. The tension build up to a great repair with the smile at the end. Perfect. Thank you Alex, please never stop.
Man. I wish you were my local repair guy. I have an EVGA 3080 that needs to be repaired and my confidence in local shops is low. This is great stuff!
Great job. Best repair channel out. Keep up the good work
This happy face after the fix... Congrats!
I will always remember when I got GTX9800 form a friend back in the day when that card was badass. He had it in a drawer with a lots of other stuff and many SMD components were missing/knocked off because it was abused in that drawer while he was tossing shit around with sharp stuff there for a year. He put it there because one day it didn't show picture, and bought another one, and after a year or so, he gave it to me. Luckly I had similar card (someone gave me, I hoard carp) but it had burnt traces on power side of board. So, firstly, i put friends card in the owen to reflow GPU (that was the main reason I thought for friends card not working) and then I took SMD components from my card and resolder it to friends card that had missing components. Also some tiny traces were damaged from knocking off smd parts but I repaired it with thin copper wire. And after all that crap, abuse, I thought, there is no fucking way that that card will work, and then I plugged that shit in, and I saw BIOS screen. I was so fucking happy that I cannot describe. I could not afford that good card at the time, and yet I had it finally thanks to my handywork. This card worked well for 5 years for rendering and gaming, until I spill some beer on PC and fucked it all up. I will never forget that card, so yeah, I know that great feel when you repair card that was pretty much in the dumpster. I love videos like this! Keep it up!
Brilliant and masterful as usual. Thanks for sharing.
Alex: "No time for playing"
Me: "..but.. it's a 3090!!" 😍
I like the trademark smile when you fix something, I think it means you actually enjoy fixing stuff, kudos to you!
Superb work, i am right in saying the gigabyte cards are most prone to fail over other brands a shame as they are often reasonably priced in the uk .
Not only their GPUs, their mainboards are trash too. Or their PSUs. Forget Gigabyte, man.
@@arcuz7862 kinda agree but i had a Z97x gaming 5 from them lasted many years with a 4790k now is starting to fail on my old pc that i just saved and put in a box. i didnt have many problems with them.
Muito boa análise! Maestria nos Reparos! Parabéns!!
awesome channel, and great educational content.
I wonder what the cost of a repair like this would be?
i like the work pride thuumbs up pal
Just admit it, you added the hdmi issue at end for extra suspense.😅
All kidding aside, awesome job! 👍
In the end the most important thing comes into play: Save the 3090 from being discarded into the landfill... 👍
GREAT job!!! those 3090 video cards are near impossible to fix!!! especially the Gigashit brand…
I really love how after fixing thousands of devices you still get a FIX (pun intended) out of it. How it must be a great life to do something you love while making a killing.
Wow - you managed to fix a $2000 Gigabyte graphics card. Good job as usual Alex.
for $2500 LOL
it costs like 899 now
and what are the chances that he has the same donor card!
Impressive again with your experience and being able to pinpoint the problem quickly. good job
Phenomenal video and work. You never explained why Gigabyte cards are harder than others? Is this the case with all Gigabyte cards in history or just the recent RTX iterations? I am particularly keen on old graphics cards...
you are nothing but amazing tech guy Alex. good job man :)
Magic comes from years of years of experience and know how 👍
Big fan love from PAKISTAN ❤
I have a computer shop. My three guys were out in the shop area trying to diagnose a computer. I walked by and offered my help. After about 5 seconds I switched on the monitor. Problem fixed!
Three guys there and none thought to check the monitor power.
Thank you so much for sharing your expertise here on TH-cam.
Thank you so much for the informations you said during the work
Pretty cool man, we missed the graphics card videos ... Hope to see more in the future 😊
i am from ethiopia i love all of your work i wiil tnx's you!!
Nice to see that you are really happy after successful repair
2000 usd card is saved! great job alex
Its actually 899 usd now:)
@@bigchungusmocha4381 from where i am it still priced at $2000 conversion rate.
I like your enthusiasm when you test and see success
great job as always
any update on that graphics card shelve, i hope that a good amount of gamers got their card back
I'm jealous of your steady hands. :)
skill + experience + dedication = magic
He is so good , and explains details so well.
Really love your videos a lot to learn from you and i love how you are happy when you fix something that is really satisfying 😊
Good job. You are really doing amazing work.
Ohh man you are a legend. This fix you did is not at all easy.
Whats do you think is the reason for the success rate being lower on Gigabyte than on other vendors' cards?
*i just wanna learn this type of skill. you should make a Video Series about repairing for beginners*🥰🥰
I find these videos very satisfying to watch :)
Man i was so happy for you when the card finally posted😂
From my younghood, i never had a chance for a good PC Build using Gigabyte components, so i never imagine myself buying a Gigabyte GPU or Motherboard at all, Power Supply is also plays an important role so always chose for a good one even if it would be more expensive than other brands
I recommend wearing safety glasses all the time till your a master experienced specialist like you
I just love 💕💕 your videos the tension was sjy high when changing The HDMI CABLE
Very usefull, You need a multimeter that shows current and voltage values on the screen.
KUDOS! great job once again sir alex
I want to learn more...you're an inspiration!
a little bit of magic with plenty of skill and knowledge
Svaka cast majstore
Najboljisi
YO THATS AWESOME! fantastic work!
alex you can use a personal fan to blow air over the chip if the heat sink is not attached...
This content is amazing and I hope one day I get on your level...we need to get you more subs for a 4k setup.
You are a genius my friend.
I always watch these videos and wish I could repair my broken GPUs like that!
That's truly appreciate, Awesome 👌 👏 👍, Congratulations 🎊 👏
Great video, thank you my friend!
Great fix Alex 😊😊
Better than Factory!!!!....Great job
A master at his craft.
Good 6 1/2+ digit voltmeter should see a voltage drop at the shorted mosfet compared to the good ones @ 2-3 amps.
Used a Keithley 2010 with 3amp power supply to measure resistance and their power dissipation of copper rails on a welding machine, that I repaired&upgraded once.
Super into this!
I have to dead GPU that I know are if not the die a simple little solder deal and I've not got the tools, hands, funds or time for anew hobby.
Interested in soon sending mine off as your work looked very strait tot he culprit and looked OEM.
It cant be the card i just repaired under the microscope. It must be the fucking monitorcable! You are my hero
I hate that unleaded solder, the stuff is crap to work with. When I was working in electronics we were forced to move over. I kept a few rolls of the old leaded solder and used it for more difficult solder jobs. I was told to stop but just hid my special supply. Pretty soon the other techs realized I still had the leaded stuff and we're always begging for my supply
Yes, We did it. :) GOD bless bro another successful job
Want to start fixing GPU's in South Africa....Great repair skills
THIS MAN LOVES HIS JOB ☺
Going through all that trouble, just to realize the HDMI cable was bad, oh man... :(
It just occurred to me. Remember when PC cases came with rails on the front for extra long cards, like hard-cards? GPUs are now at the point where we need them again, because of how long the cards are.
Amazing job, Alex
+1 subscribed to you my friend your content is amazing
Hard Work i really appreciate it man keep going on
I miss these gpu fix videos even if no fix
It was fixed great
Would have loved to watch BIG BOSS testing the card
Thanks for smiling at the end.
Having faith that the shot is no more before testing isn’t magic as you said, it’s called intelligence
when I replace mosfets, if it's on the Low Side, I always double check the RDS(on) value of the mosfet I'm replacing to make sure it's lower vs the High Side one .