It would probably end up costing the customer more than to even bother paying to get it repaired. This is worth it if you have these skills, buy a GPU that doesn't work for cheap and fix it only to flip it.
I recently moved from Ohio to the Philippines and shipped my PC. When it arrived, I can tell that the box it was in had been dropped because the tower cooler was slightly bent. I turned on the PC and the fans on my RX 6800 spin but I get no video signal. This video has given me hope that it might be fixable so now my problem is finding a reputable repair shop. Thanks for your videos and I look forward to watching more of them.
Typical problem. Never ship GPU installed inside PC. Its weight will crack PCB. Look at the PCIE slot on your card. Toward its end (where hook is) its likely to be cracked.
@@northwestrepair I don't see a crack, but just forward of the hook, the back plate is slightly pushed toward the PCB and a scuff mark on the outer edge of the PCB above it.
You make this look easy when I know in reality you have beyond next level skills. I know very little about graphics cards but I certainly enjoy and appreciate what you are doing.
I'd like to see a breakdown video where you explain everything about the clean up process, how soldering tiny IC chips is different from soldering wires, etc. Thanks!
Ye, all the GPU dies of a specific number (eg GA102, aka 3080) should be identical chips sent to board manufacturers. What I didn't know was whether the memory chips they use are all the same or if they have a freedom to pick somewhat different chips of same size, speed and technology.
@@rkan2 Bit late but what he means is that GPU manufacturers (like Nvidia and AMD) produce a lot of standalone GPU chips (like the one that was replaced in this video) and send them off to independent manufacturers (like EVGA) who then construct the board and cooling solution to create a full graphics card. The only part of the full graphics card in this video that was made by Nvidia is the GPU chip itself, everything else was custom made by EVGA.
Reboiling and resoldering over and over can cause severe damage to the board as well :) I paused after the question and gave it a thought. Pins miss-alignment will most likely to cause short-circuit. Edit: close but far. Edit2: Tip for everyone: Apply tin before resoldering, removing existing; it'll help a lot in the process :) Also, great video
This is insane. People like you make me want to learn how to do microsoldering and general repairs on this level, but I have no idea how to get started learning
This guy actually tries everything! Saddening to know there’s prob so many expensive gpus out there that are one good repair tech away from working because some other tech claimed there was no fix.
Did it ever happen to you to have a client who refuses to pay more than 50 bucks after you tried everything you knew and finally found a tiny resistor corroded, barely observable, changed it and now the card is fixed because client don't want to understand how such a tiny resistor changed can cost more than 50 bucks? If you encounter this kind of situation often enough you will risk no more to work for free and you will say that a card is not fixable if it takes more than 3 tries to fix it. Once you're experienced enough, you will almost "feel" when you can easily repair something or if it will take the life out of you working on it. I'd rather not have my life taken out of me just for a client to not pay much especially if the next day my hot air station dies or if I need to buy a new multi-meter or an oscilloscope. On the other hand, every tech has its own level of proficiency and I admit that some tech are not proficient at all doing the repairs. Anyway, things are not only black or white.
Incredible. The sheer number of possibilities when it comes to GPU repairs is mind blowing, but you just raised them up exponentially. I wasn't even aware that you could replace the entire DIE and it would be perfectly fine. Just goes to show that if you know what you're doing nothing is impossible. It makes me wonder though, did you use the die from the other GPU just for the purpose of this video, or was the other card so badly damaged that it was unrepairable, and you decided to salvage components? Either way, very impressing!
he shows before the gigabyte card for donor. and he said he dont know the gigabytes die working or not and just give a try. i love to see something broken be fixed i love it so much
It's certainly possible to do but requires a lot of skill and a little bit of luck as even when everything is done properly, all it takes is one of those balls to not cooperate and you'd have to restart. Memory chips aren't so bad though. This, how ridiculously overpriced broken GPUs are, and the time involved are why no one bothers to try
SUPERMAN HAS NOTHING ON THIS GUY ! A day job fixes cards and still has time to make amazing videos educating people! FANTASTIC! I live in China and I don't even know how to fix a card but I am learning. :)
It’s nice to see you doing extra I was thinking the same thing about using the gpu from the gigabyte card and you did it! Love to see expression even with computer parts
I am so glad I found this channel. I am so glad I found this channel. Would love to see more of this in-depth and expert process regardless of what the electronic is.
Informative video as always. This is something I admire too be able to do some day, currently don't have the money to get soldering stuff, but some day.
Running Furmark or Kombustor is great for checking the power consumption of a card, mainly. I had cards which worked great with Furmark and Heaven but failed to work with Valley. Also had cards working perfectly with Furmark, Heaven, Valley and Superposition but failed to work with 3DMARK. I usually do all of them. It takes some time but after all these benchmarks done I'm sure the cards are definitely working. Also I'm taking print screens for each and every one of the benchmarks and pass them on to the client so if something goes bad when the client puts the card into its PC it means only one thing: it's not my fault for sure.
This is amazing I am so glad you didn't give up on it, didn't know chips could be interchangeable EVGA will be missed though, their GPU designs were amazing.
Came here because i was looking for examples on how to replace paste/pads.. just to find this super interesting video thats way above my pay grade lol. Still watched every second too
Truly Awesome repair! I wonder if the large amount of thermal pads really helped displace some of that initial drop shock. Also dont feel bad about killing the original GPU, I would say those contacts were surely sheared off or at least heavily damaged by the initial impact, not your heating equipment. Keep up the good work!
Superb Tony well done mate, Yes I certainly have learned a lot from your video's, you are very kind to share, a lot of the others want to keep the information to themselves to make them look special
your work is of impeccable standard, First rank quality. But you are also human, and occasional slips, such as not quite positioning a chip correctly is totally forgivable. What matters is that you own your errors and fix them. The fact that you show them in your videos and don't edit them out is very much to your credit. I am fully qualified in electronics, and recognise a master at work. Your amazing attention to detail would be essential if you were working with valve equipment, let alone the microelectronics you are actually dealing with. I have seen some videos where people have demonstrated the value of better equipment. So I suggest you fundraise to get yourself a better hot air station etc. You fully deserve the best
If you look closer you will see, that the pads are in fact NOT RIPPED‼️ It may look like but it’s most likely corrosion. You can see it at the beginning where the light shines in a different angle.( 9:37 ) Try to measure the resistance of the pad against a ground pad, you will see that it has still a connection
Posted on wrong video! I love your videos sir. My old Asus Strix 980Ti refuses to initialize on boot. Took it completely apart, cleaned and inspected. I can't visually see anything wrong with it. I do feel bad tossing it out. I remember a slight burnt smell when it died but again I couldn't find anything that looks like a thermal incident. I may try a few more of these checks you perform, tested fuses all good.
This is so amazing and satisfying to see what one is able to do with the right skills. Wish I would knew a single percent of what you were actually doing. :) Great videos!
@@neralem It needs a start and oly after tyhe start it needs dedication. The start is always first. The way it starts is also very important. Many people wait for a chance to start but few actually give themselves that chance by their own will. It's actually easier and more achievable to start things on own will than to wait for the chance. It's the same with quitting smoking or drinking or doing drugs. Usually smokers can't quit easy because the moment they get one cigarette, they start heavy smoking again. This happens because they start quittig the wrong way and by doing so they are doomed to fail. I did smoke for years. What I did was to force myself to smoke 2 cigarettes a day, every single day: 2 coffees a day with two cigarettes a day. This seemed the hardest and impossible thing to do for each and every single person I know who was smoking. Everyone told me it will be impossible. It's ... a lot of time since I smoke never more than 2 cigarettes a day. I forgot when I started this but it's many years. Many days I drink my first coffee without smoking so I probably smoke less than 2 cigarettes a day. Many days I don't feel like smoking at all. Instead of pushing myself to not smoke, I pushed to mandatory smoke 2 cigarettes a day which I can't do every day because it feels like an effort to smoke and sometimes I really don't want to (just like a lot of days we don't want to go to work ). Smoking fircibly 2 cigarettes a day has really become like a job I sometimes hate. Human mind is easily tricked so why not be me tricking my mind the way I want to? I know how I react. I know what I would gladly do. I know what I would hate doing. Next step would be to make myself (not forcing myself- forcing never really works) to do what I want to. Start a new job. Easy. Get a new skill and pursue the job. Don't start a new job. Same easy. Don't even try. The real difference is in the way one sees things.
Just awesome. I watch your vids for entertaining. I'm not an electrician or have a deeper understanding of circuits. Nevertheless, I find it very interesting to see such techniques. that's why i come here. I also have an EVGA GTX 680 Classified lying around. However, only the circuit board, no heat sink. The memory and some capacitors have probably been damaged. I bet the card could still be repaired
ok ok this video makes the solder procedure seem so simple.. however, i think a cheap practice chip board will be needed before destroying an expensive graphic card. 😍thanks
Your videos are just amazing man. Question, can you do an informative video on which courses to do or which books to read in order to get somewhere close to this skillset level (or atleast try to).
I have learned that I like watching your videos. There is something magical and satisfying, watching the flux(?) washing over the solder and then things just sorta fall into place once the heat is applied. No idea what all is going on, but it is nice to watch. Is there any sort of feedback on how/where it's supposed to align, or is it really just eyeballing it to get it in the right position? Talking about the memory chip you were replacing, then put back.
Reballing those memory chips is interesting to watch. Interesting how they just ball up on the contacts. I realize it mostly has to do with the hot air station and the flux, but still enjoyable watching!
I really love your videos but can you please make videos explaining what are you doing in each step and what are you using for that step. This will really help us understand.
my computer fell off my table and landed on my DVI cable plugged into EVGA GTX 1060 bent it 90 degrees used a DP to DVI and it still works these cards are really strong I'm out a dvi port but that doesn't matter to me (I'm really lucky nothing broke but the DVI port) props to EVGA for making a gpu that can withstand an entire computer landing on it from 3.4ft up.
Jeez...first of all incredible skill bro! First time e see your videos and indeed, wow! Su much knowledge and electronic skills. I would like to know more on how your readings are made! Thx for the content
Nice, i watched other videos and found a forum, chinafix that they can disable a memory channel that is bad and made the card work but in less vram, using a bios editor and tools
@@northwestrepair will send to you, there is two ithink , one is for amd rx 500 series, other one is on chinafix with nvidia cards idont knowwhat models, be right back
If you need a repair, please contact me using a link in the description.
Where are you located sir, just continent is okay
@@nask0 see INFO panel on this channel, but not northwest anymore
@@finco7726 Thank you sir
Wow, those are some impressive repair skills. Most repair shops would just give up on the card.
Most wouldn't even try, and wouldn't even know of any business to refer you to.
It would probably end up costing the customer more than to even bother paying to get it repaired. This is worth it if you have these skills, buy a GPU that doesn't work for cheap and fix it only to flip it.
@@G34RH34D Except you'll need to buy all the necessary tools for the repair too, which are worth a new GPU or two in themselves...
Not Northridge Fix The BEST !
@@swisstraeng More than that , way more.
You are next level man, most of those services would give up or would not waste time...
You know these successful repairs make me happy, like seriously it's sad to see such beautiful powerful cards go to waste.
I recently moved from Ohio to the Philippines and shipped my PC. When it arrived, I can tell that the box it was in had been dropped because the tower cooler was slightly bent. I turned on the PC and the fans on my RX 6800 spin but I get no video signal. This video has given me hope that it might be fixable so now my problem is finding a reputable repair shop. Thanks for your videos and I look forward to watching more of them.
Typical problem. Never ship GPU installed inside PC. Its weight will crack PCB.
Look at the PCIE slot on your card. Toward its end (where hook is) its likely to be cracked.
@@northwestrepair I don't see a crack, but just forward of the hook, the back plate is slightly pushed toward the PCB and a scuff mark on the outer edge of the PCB above it.
Congrats on getting out of Ohio lol :):
You make this look easy when I know in reality you have beyond next level skills. I know very little about graphics cards but I certainly enjoy and appreciate what you are doing.
I'd like to see a breakdown video where you explain everything about the clean up process, how soldering tiny IC chips is different from soldering wires, etc. Thanks!
It was nice of TH-cam to recommend me this channel.
I never thought one could just swap the actual dye of the gpu, but in hindsight, it makes sense.
There is allot people dont know. I hope to bring more light to the possibilities and ways of fixing things instead of throwing it away and buying new.
@@northwestrepair awesome ideology ✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻
Ye, all the GPU dies of a specific number (eg GA102, aka 3080) should be identical chips sent to board manufacturers. What I didn't know was whether the memory chips they use are all the same or if they have a freedom to pick somewhat different chips of same size, speed and technology.
@@txtasosxt would you mean with sent to board manufacturers?
@@rkan2 Bit late but what he means is that GPU manufacturers (like Nvidia and AMD) produce a lot of standalone GPU chips (like the one that was replaced in this video) and send them off to independent manufacturers (like EVGA) who then construct the board and cooling solution to create a full graphics card. The only part of the full graphics card in this video that was made by Nvidia is the GPU chip itself, everything else was custom made by EVGA.
You have the best repair videos… really level up… much better than many big channels… congrats
Exquisite! Good to see the EVGA side of things aren't to blame, sorry to hear their latest state of affairs. I've had this card for 6 years!
Reboiling and resoldering over and over can cause severe damage to the board as well :)
I paused after the question and gave it a thought. Pins miss-alignment will most likely to cause short-circuit.
Edit: close but far.
Edit2: Tip for everyone: Apply tin before resoldering, removing existing; it'll help a lot in the process :)
Also, great video
It's all your experience and expertise in the repair. one would have call it no fix
You are Awesome ✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻
This is insane. People like you make me want to learn how to do microsoldering and general repairs on this level, but I have no idea how to get started learning
This guy actually tries everything! Saddening to know there’s prob so many expensive gpus out there that are one good repair tech away from working because some other tech claimed there was no fix.
Did it ever happen to you to have a client who refuses to pay more than 50 bucks after you tried everything you knew and finally found a tiny resistor corroded, barely observable, changed it and now the card is fixed because client don't want to understand how such a tiny resistor changed can cost more than 50 bucks?
If you encounter this kind of situation often enough you will risk no more to work for free and you will say that a card is not fixable if it takes more than 3 tries to fix it. Once you're experienced enough, you will almost "feel" when you can easily repair something or if it will take the life out of you working on it. I'd rather not have my life taken out of me just for a client to not pay much especially if the next day my hot air station dies or if I need to buy a new multi-meter or an oscilloscope.
On the other hand, every tech has its own level of proficiency and I admit that some tech are not proficient at all doing the repairs.
Anyway, things are not only black or white.
@@Dandan-tg6tj Isn't it illegal to not be paid for your work? What country do you live in that does not enforce labor laws?
Incredible. The sheer number of possibilities when it comes to GPU repairs is mind blowing, but you just raised them up exponentially. I wasn't even aware that you could replace the entire DIE and it would be perfectly fine. Just goes to show that if you know what you're doing nothing is impossible. It makes me wonder though, did you use the die from the other GPU just for the purpose of this video, or was the other card so badly damaged that it was unrepairable, and you decided to salvage components? Either way, very impressing!
he shows before the gigabyte card for donor. and he said he dont know the gigabytes die working or not and just give a try. i love to see something broken be fixed i love it so much
It's certainly possible to do but requires a lot of skill and a little bit of luck as even when everything is done properly, all it takes is one of those balls to not cooperate and you'd have to restart. Memory chips aren't so bad though. This, how ridiculously overpriced broken GPUs are, and the time involved are why no one bothers to try
what i dont understand is y he didn't flash a new bios on the card, which would be mandatory in order to make the gpu function with a different card
chip itself is the same, if anything non evga bios would break the card
@@mmertech I don't see why it wouldn't work though as the die is provided by nvidia to all partners, and partners just make the board for the die
My friend your videos are super entertaining and amazing, you deserve to have 1000000 times more subs, one more here to help.
a BIG thumb up for your hard work and dedication.
If it was me, I would probably would have flipped the table in frustration
Thank you.
Amazing. Never seen anyone replace a GPU before. What skill.
SUPERMAN HAS NOTHING ON THIS GUY ! A day job fixes cards and still has time to make amazing videos educating people! FANTASTIC! I live in China and I don't even know how to fix a card but I am learning. :)
9:56 for thick board you can remove all metal stand to increase output heat
The amount of sitting time gives me back aches and hernia. The repair level skills are awesome. I think I learned a lot on this video. Thanks!
I really like your channel. No ego, no unnecessary comment, just interesting and some highly skilful repairs on display. Kudos.
Very Impressive repair! A Master at work here.
I learned nothing from your accident, as this what you do is beyond my pay grade, but I still enjoy you fixing things.
That feeling you get when she boots up successfully........priceless! Primo ending & top notch troubleshooting/reflow....as usual!
DUDE, im glad found this channel. This is really entertaining also helpful. Youve got 1 sub from me. Thank you for your hardwork
Definitely on of the most advanced electronics repair person you will ever see on TH-cam.
It’s nice to see you doing extra I was thinking the same thing about using the gpu from the gigabyte card and you did it! Love to see expression even with computer parts
Wow....I've never seen the gpu taken off before. You definitely get a sub from me.
I am so glad I found this channel. I am so glad I found this channel. Would love to see more of this in-depth and expert process regardless of what the electronic is.
Manually reposition balls take mad skills and a steady hand. Respect
this guy has forgotten more than most repair shops have learned. Im super impressed and subbed thumbs up from me
It's art. I'm not into electronics and all that stuff, and what you do is pure art, surgical precision.
This man reminds me of LPL when he has tremendous skills and makes it look easy when we all know it's not
This guy should buy dead gpus, then fix them up and sell them on eBay for a tidy sum of cash 💵 Awesome work.
This repair took some balls dude.
Great job, I have the same card. Now I know where to send it when it kicks the bucket.
Informative video as always. This is something I admire too be able to do some day, currently don't have the money to get soldering stuff, but some day.
You can do it!
Running Furmark or Kombustor is great for checking the power consumption of a card, mainly. I had cards which worked great with Furmark and Heaven but failed to work with Valley. Also had cards working perfectly with Furmark, Heaven, Valley and Superposition but failed to work with 3DMARK. I usually do all of them. It takes some time but after all these benchmarks done I'm sure the cards are definitely working. Also I'm taking print screens for each and every one of the benchmarks and pass them on to the client so if something goes bad when the client puts the card into its PC it means only one thing: it's not my fault for sure.
I've never got so excited watching a GPU come back to life! Love the video, what a thorough job you did!
Epic repair video! I hope the pair that I am sending out to you have a much less dramatic repair process.
Time will tell.
This is amazing I am so glad you didn't give up on it, didn't know chips could be interchangeable EVGA will be missed though, their GPU designs were amazing.
Came here because i was looking for examples on how to replace paste/pads.. just to find this super interesting video thats way above my pay grade lol. Still watched every second too
The next level repair, awesome
Thanks !
Truly Awesome repair! I wonder if the large amount of thermal pads really helped displace some of that initial drop shock. Also dont feel bad about killing the original GPU, I would say those contacts were surely sheared off or at least heavily damaged by the initial impact, not your heating equipment.
Keep up the good work!
You are so amazing, you repaired what nobody else would not even your competitors, like NorthridgeFix. I subbed
Superb Tony well done mate, Yes I certainly have learned a lot from your video's, you are very kind to share, a lot of the others want to keep the information to themselves to make them look special
I would like to say, I did the same happy face when the video image appeared. Many thanks for your work!
your work is of impeccable standard, First rank quality. But you are also human, and occasional slips, such as not quite positioning a chip correctly is totally forgivable. What matters is that you own your errors and fix them. The fact that you show them in your videos and don't edit them out is very much to your credit.
I am fully qualified in electronics, and recognise a master at work. Your amazing attention to detail would be essential if you were working with valve equipment, let alone the microelectronics you are actually dealing with. I have seen some videos where people have demonstrated the value of better equipment. So I suggest you fundraise to get yourself a better hot air station etc. You fully deserve the best
Wow! You got major skills bro!!!
If you look closer you will see, that the pads are in fact NOT RIPPED‼️
It may look like but it’s most likely corrosion. You can see it at the beginning where the light shines in a different angle.( 9:37 ) Try to measure the resistance of the pad against a ground pad, you will see that it has still a connection
Posted on wrong video! I love your videos sir.
My old Asus Strix 980Ti refuses to initialize on boot. Took it completely apart, cleaned and inspected. I can't visually see anything wrong with it. I do feel bad tossing it out.
I remember a slight burnt smell when it died but again I couldn't find anything that looks like a thermal incident. I may try a few more of these checks you perform, tested fuses all good.
This is so amazing and satisfying to see what one is able to do with the right skills.
Wish I would knew a single percent of what you were actually doing. :)
Great videos!
What stops you? Years ago I was thinking the exact thing. Everybody did. "Northwestrepair" too. Nobody is born knowing.
@@Dandan-tg6tj True. All you need is dedication to something.
@@neralem It needs a start and oly after tyhe start it needs dedication. The start is always first.
The way it starts is also very important.
Many people wait for a chance to start but few actually give themselves that chance by their own will.
It's actually easier and more achievable to start things on own will than to wait for the chance.
It's the same with quitting smoking or drinking or doing drugs.
Usually smokers can't quit easy because the moment they get one cigarette, they start heavy smoking again.
This happens because they start quittig the wrong way and by doing so they are doomed to fail.
I did smoke for years.
What I did was to force myself to smoke 2 cigarettes a day, every single day: 2 coffees a day with two cigarettes a day.
This seemed the hardest and impossible thing to do for each and every single person I know who was smoking. Everyone told me it will be impossible.
It's ... a lot of time since I smoke never more than 2 cigarettes a day. I forgot when I started this but it's many years. Many days I drink my first coffee without smoking so I probably smoke less than 2 cigarettes a day. Many days I don't feel like smoking at all.
Instead of pushing myself to not smoke, I pushed to mandatory smoke 2 cigarettes a day which I can't do every day because it feels like an effort to smoke and sometimes I really don't want to (just like a lot of days we don't want to go to work ). Smoking fircibly 2 cigarettes a day has really become like a job I sometimes hate.
Human mind is easily tricked so why not be me tricking my mind the way I want to?
I know how I react. I know what I would gladly do. I know what I would hate doing.
Next step would be to make myself (not forcing myself- forcing never really works) to do what I want to.
Start a new job. Easy. Get a new skill and pursue the job.
Don't start a new job. Same easy. Don't even try.
The real difference is in the way one sees things.
You are the MASTER of GPU repair, dude. I wanna be like you one day
I don't know 90% of what you are doing, but it's such a pleasure to see someone work so hard to achieve something. Thank you !!
Amazing skills and patience!!!
What I've learned I have no clue about but it still fascinates me!!
This has to cost more than the card is worth, but you are the freakin' man dude! Keeping that e-waste to a minimum.
Just awesome.
I watch your vids for entertaining.
I'm not an electrician or have a deeper understanding of circuits. Nevertheless, I find it very interesting to see such techniques. that's why i come here. I also have an EVGA GTX 680 Classified lying around. However, only the circuit board, no heat sink. The memory and some capacitors have probably been damaged. I bet the card could still be repaired
Wow this is the most impressive thing i have seen this year. You're very talented my man!
Awesome work my friend. There is lot to learn from you. Thank you
I have no intention of repairing GPU's but this was very interesting and entertaining. Great job man 👌
Oh my God. I wish to have your skills. They are out of this world.
Fantastic you were able to save this 1080ti. I own one and it has been one of the best cards I have owned. Great program NWR.
ok ok this video makes the solder procedure seem so simple.. however, i think a cheap practice chip board will be needed before destroying an expensive graphic card. 😍thanks
Wow u are a hardcore repair men!
Persistance is unbelievable. Bravo 👏
thanks. i try
replacing gpu chips like its nothing, what a beast. Glad its working again :)
Your videos are just amazing man. Question, can you do an informative video on which courses to do or which books to read in order to get somewhere close to this skillset level (or atleast try to).
i am always astonished by your work ! What skills you've got !
Great work and a well crafted video.
Thank you very much!
Simply amazing skills!!! Subscribed! I cant wait to see more
That chap from Northridgefix should sponsor you one of his V2 microscopes. Great work and effort btw.
You´re an electronic warrior! Cheers from France.
your videos are precious. thanks to share your knowledge
I have learned that I like watching your videos. There is something magical and satisfying, watching the flux(?) washing over the solder and then things just sorta fall into place once the heat is applied. No idea what all is going on, but it is nice to watch.
Is there any sort of feedback on how/where it's supposed to align, or is it really just eyeballing it to get it in the right position? Talking about the memory chip you were replacing, then put back.
The way you realign those tiny balls seems like magic to me as a layperson. I already had trouble realigning bent pins on a AMD CPU.
i like your videos so much experience and knowledge and vary technical
Just a week ago when i subed to your chanel you had very few who subed and now you have 3k glad to see that going up
Reballing those memory chips is interesting to watch. Interesting how they just ball up on the contacts. I realize it mostly has to do with the hot air station and the flux, but still enjoyable watching!
Thanks the video, I learned something again😁.
Pure wizardry man, pure wizardry 🧙♂
Amazing content! Please never stop! :)
I really love your videos but can you please make videos explaining what are you doing in each step and what are you using for that step. This will really help us understand.
Killed it. Nice repair.
I really enjoy all your videos keep going
Thank you! Will do!
Unbelievably good work. Just found your channel. Subbed
my computer fell off my table and landed on my DVI cable plugged into EVGA GTX 1060 bent it 90 degrees used a DP to DVI and it still works these cards are really strong I'm out a dvi port but that doesn't matter to me (I'm really lucky nothing broke but the DVI port) props to EVGA for making a gpu that can withstand an entire computer landing on it from 3.4ft up.
I love to watch your fix bideo card works !
your work is amazing!
My FTW3 is still going strong, I gave it to my roomate along with the old system, he couldn't be happier.
You picked an prophetic time to post this video. EVGA is ending their GPU product lines with Nvidia.
Jeez...first of all incredible skill bro! First time e see your videos and indeed, wow!
Su much knowledge and electronic skills. I would like to know more on how your readings are made! Thx for the content
Nice, i watched other videos and found a forum, chinafix that they can disable a memory channel that is bad and made the card work but in less vram, using a bios editor and tools
There is a method for 30 series cards but not for 10 or 20.
Do you have a link ?
@@northwestrepair will send to you, there is two ithink , one is for amd rx 500 series, other one is on chinafix with nvidia cards idont knowwhat models, be right back
new subs here from philippines..i idolized you sir..the way you fixed the gpu..nice...
Thanks for the sub!
appreciate these videos so much. keep them coming.
Just came across your channel. Great stuff! Subbed.
Welcome aboard!
Subscribed today!I really enjoy watching
Cool, thanks !
dude i just found your channel it´s crazy to see how you repair those cards and stuff