And he wasn't cussing when the tools give a little fight against him. Or maybe he was swearing and did the audio dub dialog over it anyway. :} BTDT.. Had to fix a mig welder in the middle of a ATV fabrication/repair once. Or the CRT on the bench back in the day decided to quit. So I fixed that too along the way.
Lets take a moment to appreciate how much self control he had here. He could have trolled the crap out of Northridge on this one, but he didn't. I feel a little choked up!
@@Soddus. No problem. This and many other gpus I got came from him with no fix but they were repairable. I am just raising the awareness that he can't fix anything that requires spending more than 10 minutes of work.
@@andreasotto1977 NRF play up their abilities to the point of comedy ("BETTER THAN FACTORY!") when they either don't want the hassle of or simply are unable to do reballs. I mean, this was a straightforward, if probably somewhat time intensive fix for NWR with next to no guessing involved at all, but if your repair attempt is basically just looking at the 12VHPWR plug to see if it has melted, then sending it back as a no fix when it hasn't, that's a red flag to me. On that note @northwestrepair, excluding repairing your heater, how long did it take you to fix this card?
@@northwestrepair aaah, _NOW_ I get it. I always thought it was just some tongue-in-cheek bashing against them, but now I learned you got actual GPUs he would not fix it all makes sense.
Great catch on the GPU heat, not many technicians go the extra mile! I just about stopped watching Northridge fix because he doesn't take troubleshooting and repair far enough.. You are one of the few that actually "WORK" on repairing cards. I am a big supporter of repair and don't like e-waste out there. Great job on this one and all the others. I really enjoy your videos.
Reballing looks like magic when they all melt into the grid. I used to feel like hot tuna when I could replace 0805s. I can't imagine being steady enough for that super tiny stuff.
@@michaelcarson8375 Do you mean clean it from off of a component you applied it to, or clean it if wanders elsewhere? I use dry cotton swabs first, then cotton swabs with isopropyl alcohol to get it off of where it was supposed to be. Sometimes the stuff will kind of harden up on the chip or heatsink and I will use more liquid metal to dissolve it back into solution, then the cotton swabs again. You can scrape at it with a razor blade, like an xacto with a square tip, but one slip and you can do some major damage to yourself or nearby components. If it has gotten somewhere it shouldn't be, compressed air can possibly launch it off of the pcb or wherever. Haven't had to do that, but you'd want to do it immediately cause that stuff will start dissolving solder and wick under smds and such. I'm not sure if compressed air would be effective though, the surface tension might make it just spread around. I would use swabs unless it has already capillary-actioned itself under a component.
I finally subbed today after realizing how often I seek out your videos. Literally none of the other board repair channels do it for me man, your style of presenting and just talking about the work MAKES it interesting. Keep up the killer job man!🤘
'no fix' because fix requires effort. NorthWestRepair is not afraid of effort, in fact I believe he thrives on it. GO NWR!!! You never cease to impress sir, which is why I would come to you first if I ever needed a repair, you are No. 1 in my book.
Tony, when I need surgery I will turn to you first instead of wasting time with other medical professionals. Based on this video, and many others, you are clearly a genius. I don't think there is anything you can't do exceedingly well. I trust you with my life. Russ
Man you not only earn a comment and a subscription but since i discovered your channel you earned my respect. Is not much but to me you are the NO. 1 GPU technician.
6:04 Looking at the 16-pin voltage at 11.4V , 12V rail is very close to going below ATX specs, that it has to be between 11.4v and 12.6v . The power supply or the 12VHPWR cable is at its very limit.
As far as I can tell, reballing requires the right equipment but also good technique, expertise. Since Im not a repair guy, Im guessing Tony uses solder paste on the core & socket pcb. Im not sure that is standard procedure, as my impression is that many would never touch solder paste. As to Northridge/ Alex, its clear to anyone following his channel that he doesnt want to spend too long on each item. He's said before they have a huge backlog of items waiting for repair. To each, their own. Kudos to Tony for taking the time and having the expertise.
I watch your channel a lot, you have a great attitude & attention to detail in your work, it is art! Great music picks for this video with synthwave & having to repair your own repair equipment this time round was awesome. Keep up the great work!
Its always so therapeutic to watch the fixes. It was very odd to see the card run so hot, and the problem was just pads being slightly to thicc. Looking forward to the next video :D
Wow, awesome job. If that was my 4090, and you’d fixed for me. I’d say you are a Hero. I would given you big hug. Cus you deserve it. Not that I can afford 4090 here in Canada. But good job :)
Have been using liquid metal on my RTX 4080 for almost 2 years. Still rocking solid Most importantly is all about how you apply and the amount on it. Have done it on my other older GPUs and even CPU too still work like a charm
Excellent work! You have to handle liquid metal with extreme care. I’ve applied it quite a few times now and learned how to handle it. But along the way had exactly this happen: a tiny speck of the stuff getting under one of the memory chips. Since then, I take more care to mask the surrounding area and apply as little as possible, adding more only if necessary. I wouldn’t recommend people using it, only if they’re enthusiasts and prepared for the consequences of a mistake.
Liquid metal is very high risk but very low rewards compared to high quality thermal paste, i personally avoid it. Specially for videocards, unless you bios hack, you're already maxed out the overclocking headroom no matter what cooling solution you use. I water blocked my 4090 only to get lower temps while more quiet, i actually underclock my card in the summer to reduce heat in the room. It isn't fun gaming next to a 700w space heater in mid summer.
@@Limitbreakur indeed, for most there will be little gain and the risk cannot be understated. I personally have a passively cooled system where it is important to get the heat away from the source as quickly as possible and prevent heat soak. Here the LM really helps. But I’ve got a regular air-cooled build where there was only a slight edge taken off the temperature curve - not worth the hassle.
@@kasimirdenhertog3516 I get the eppeal of that. I've somewhat passive cooled mine via radiator. The radiator hum is very quiet, the fans are set up to only turn on eventually. Still, i personally avoid LM but if you know what you're doing and confident then that's the best you can ask for.
3:58 Man! This was friggin sick! Cool synth “Hackerman” vibes showing how godlike you are with how much bullcrap has to be done to fix HuMON error, more of scenes and music like this!! Props to the deep pockets of 4090 owners to spend 4090 money to deliver us this content!
I love your sense of humor. In the other way, finally someone, who checks phases with scope and do the repair, not going for easy job and ripping money for no fix as that "other" guy. SUBSCRIBED 🙂
I will say no matter the cost you charge its not enough, I have never have watched such mastery of rebuilding boards and putting them back together like nothing! I will say if i ever do need work done i know who i will be getting a hold of!
And that’s why I conformally coated around every vram chip, the GPU core as well as anything else surrounding it that’s at risk of shorting if a mishap were to occur, before applying Liquid Metal. Such an easily avoided disaster with a little bit of forethought..and prep of course.
I've used "liquid metal" a long time ago. But always on cpus with a heat spreader that was lapped along with the heatsink and only used the bare minimum liquid metal that would just "wet" the metal of the CPU surface using nothing but the heat of my gloved finger... super fussy stuff and depending on the specifics of the alloy not compatible with some very common metals. There is something about two perfectly smooth metal surfaces acting like panes of glass stuck to each other with nothing but a drop of water feels so unexpected and like a science experiment. Would not use it on modern stuff. That said keeping something from becoming e-waste great work!
Not only are You good at fixing shit but the editing is nice, too! I had some chuckles and it was pleasing to watch. I might surf for no fix/damaged card and send it to You. How much was the fix, if I may ask?
I know the cirurgic precision, effort and tools it takes to reball these cores. But I can't help to cheer for a reball every video. My mind goes: "Reball! Reball! Reball!"
I’m a big fan of your work. I don’t own a fancy graphics card. Yet alone one that needs fixing. But your impressive skill set, logical fault finding and methodical practices? They are so calming to watch. To see faults being fixed is always enjoyable. The special videos are those where you also undo the harm inflicted by others. Your customers have their cards fixed and returned. I get to watch videos that help me unwind after a bad day. Yep, for me, seeing this healthy 4090 is good for my state of mind and my blood pressure 😂. With thanks and best wishes. And please keep the videos coming…😊
Nice! You're an angel of value! I find your videos so relaxing, as you make an impossible task to me look easy! I have a mind that continuously is searching for automation and improvements. The value you provide to the device consumers, the manufacturers (saving their brand in my view), the reduced e-waste, is so underrated. If I had the wealth I'd love to work in partnership with you to iteratively develop a fully automated system to problem solve and fix GPUs or perhaps a wide range of boards. Start with fundamental processes for solder de-solder of components as well as re-balling and cleaning pads, then the more challenging (almost artistic) work you do to repair pads and board cracks. Work on automating fault finding, etc., etc... It would be a real useful thing to process many more cards, indeed the concept could be staged for all sorts of repairs in the long term, such as data recovery or upgrades to boards, etc.. slowly expanding the business and capabilities for fixing and repairing things. Its work of the angels!
The scary movie part still lives in my head rent free after so many years. It was such a rib breaking from laughter scene that will always stick with me it seems especially when it pops up randomly as i go about my day. Instant like for using that scene 😂
There are a bunch of kids on TH-cam making videos on how to coat your card and GPU core with clear nail polish so you can use liquid metal on them... I commented on 2 of the videos warning that it was a terrible idea and both content creators freaked out on me. Maybe I should link this video to them. ;)
i felt like i am watching a movie, sir you are a awesome technician , you are doing gods work giving someones forever lost hard earned money back, loved the music choice you added to the video, Thank you😇
Like it. This was what I wanted to do, when I took my electronics education, 27 years ago (and still do but can't now). Fixing things that concerns just deem dead, becuse of time costs. Unfortuned I got stuck in paperwork and retakeing classes, to get the same catificates and dipommas and license again, after moving to a new country. Just becasue the new country did not approve my papers, even tho I had checked before moveing and they shoud..
I cant. Ill have to buy a lot of expensive cameras and equipment to do that. The camera i have CAN record at 4K but only internally. It does not have 4K HDMI out and i dont know what camera models do to be honest.
Videos like this are why you are a true craftsman of your work. Not a hack like Northridge Fux that puts out videos making fun of people with Alzheimer’s.
@@C0mmanderX No, that makes him a lazy pos charging way too many people no-fix fees so he can buy a million dollar home, if he has that much work, hire people.
oh man, I love the vids, Gives me hope that when my EVGA 3090 mem finally fails ( gets checker boarded for a frame every now and again) I'll see my card fixed.
Darn! I did not know liquid metal could leak this way! Also, did not know either that 0.2mm on thermal pad could affect temperature that much! oO Thanks for the video!
We interrupt this GPU repair to bring you Preheater Station repair.
Now back to your regularly scheduled reball.
And he wasn't cussing when the tools give a little fight against him. Or maybe he was swearing and did the audio dub dialog over it anyway. :} BTDT.. Had to fix a mig welder in the middle of a ATV fabrication/repair once. Or the CRT on the bench back in the day decided to quit. So I fixed that too along the way.
I fix shit like you on the way to real repairs.
Lets take a moment to appreciate how much self control he had here. He could have trolled the crap out of Northridge on this one, but he didn't. I feel a little choked up!
I know I'm very, VERY late to the party, but some day I will have to ask, sooo … where does that northridge banter stem from?
whats his problem with northridge?
@@Soddus. No problem. This and many other gpus I got came from him with no fix but they were repairable. I am just raising the awareness that he can't fix anything that requires spending more than 10 minutes of work.
@@andreasotto1977 NRF play up their abilities to the point of comedy ("BETTER THAN FACTORY!") when they either don't want the hassle of or simply are unable to do reballs. I mean, this was a straightforward, if probably somewhat time intensive fix for NWR with next to no guessing involved at all, but if your repair attempt is basically just looking at the 12VHPWR plug to see if it has melted, then sending it back as a no fix when it hasn't, that's a red flag to me.
On that note @northwestrepair, excluding repairing your heater, how long did it take you to fix this card?
@@northwestrepair aaah, _NOW_ I get it. I always thought it was just some tongue-in-cheek bashing against them, but now I learned you got actual GPUs he would not fix it all makes sense.
Watched this at an airport and 4 other guys started watching this video with me.
valid
I would watch with you in the airport
Best repair channel on youtube. As a DIY enthusiast I can't get enough.
Agree 💯%
Great catch on the GPU heat, not many technicians go the extra mile! I just about stopped watching Northridge fix because he doesn't take troubleshooting and repair far enough.. You are one of the few that actually "WORK" on repairing cards. I am a big supporter of repair and don't like e-waste out there. Great job on this one and all the others. I really enjoy your videos.
He even repaired his heater. Damn technician to the core
Splitting balls sounds painful.
🤣
The troubling part is he sounds satisfied with himself. 🤣
Uuuh, what about blowjob with actually blow ?
Maybe it’ll work like kidney and now you have three balls when they regrow.
LOL True. Come to think of it I would not be feeling very hot either after finding bits of metal had been shoved in and around my boy's. Yikes!!
I love that mid repair the pre-heater breaks and dude just repairs it too x)
Yeah the loose wire that broke free while it was sitting on his desk. Definitely for sure a spontaneous and unexpected turn mid "repair".
@@happymann1000 right, cause he doesnt move it around or anything and it was only sitting still on his desk...
Reballing looks like magic when they all melt into the grid. I used to feel like hot tuna when I could replace 0805s. I can't imagine being steady enough for that super tiny stuff.
I was noticing the core temps were a bit high and then you finished it off with the cherry on top.. sweet!
Excellent video. Your attention to detail is outstanding.
I'd sure like to know the best way to clean up liquid metal.
@@michaelcarson8375 Do you mean clean it from off of a component you applied it to, or clean it if wanders elsewhere?
I use dry cotton swabs first, then cotton swabs with isopropyl alcohol to get it off of where it was supposed to be. Sometimes the stuff will kind of harden up on the chip or heatsink and I will use more liquid metal to dissolve it back into solution, then the cotton swabs again. You can scrape at it with a razor blade, like an xacto with a square tip, but one slip and you can do some major damage to yourself or nearby components.
If it has gotten somewhere it shouldn't be, compressed air can possibly launch it off of the pcb or wherever. Haven't had to do that, but you'd want to do it immediately cause that stuff will start dissolving solder and wick under smds and such. I'm not sure if compressed air would be effective though, the surface tension might make it just spread around. I would use swabs unless it has already capillary-actioned itself under a component.
@@Will_Played Both. An answer to both would be good just to know HOW to deal it.
I finally subbed today after realizing how often I seek out your videos.
Literally none of the other board repair channels do it for me man, your style of presenting and just talking about the work MAKES it interesting.
Keep up the killer job man!🤘
give the customer a nrf no fix discount lmao. actually wait, don't. that's too many cards you'd end up discounting
'no fix' because fix requires effort. NorthWestRepair is not afraid of effort, in fact I believe he thrives on it. GO NWR!!! You never cease to impress sir, which is why I would come to you first if I ever needed a repair, you are No. 1 in my book.
Tony, when I need surgery I will turn to you first instead of wasting time with other medical professionals. Based on this video, and many others, you are clearly a genius. I don't think there is anything you can't do exceedingly well. I trust you with my life. Russ
GG feel the heat of reballing your balls
I have had the pleasure of watching many of your videos and I must say, I thoroughly enjoy them. Your expertise in electronics is truly commendable.
GOAT repair I’ve seen on this channel. So good. Thanks for sharing it.
Man you not only earn a comment and a subscription but since i discovered your channel you earned my respect. Is not much but to me you are the NO. 1 GPU technician.
6:04 Looking at the 16-pin voltage at 11.4V , 12V rail is very close to going below ATX specs, that it has to be between 11.4v and 12.6v . The power supply or the 12VHPWR cable is at its very limit.
I’m always in awe of your skills no matter how many times i see you do this.
I've been bingeing this channel for 12 hours straight now. Cant get enough of it!!
As far as I can tell, reballing requires the right equipment but also good technique, expertise. Since Im not a repair guy, Im guessing Tony uses solder paste on the core & socket pcb. Im not sure that is standard procedure, as my impression is that many would never touch solder paste.
As to Northridge/ Alex, its clear to anyone following his channel that he doesnt want to spend too long on each item. He's said before they have a huge backlog of items waiting for repair. To each, their own. Kudos to Tony for taking the time and having the expertise.
I live for your core-reballing montages. Always a vibe. 🤘
GENIUS!!! Amazing work. YOU'RE THE MAN!!!
You handle the customer's balls like no other
The way you work them. You clearly had to deal with many many balls in your life
Noticed the high temps. Great job as always!
I have watched like 10 videos from you already. Its kindda hypnotic. Awesome repairs!
I watch your channel a lot, you have a great attitude & attention to detail in your work, it is art! Great music picks for this video with synthwave & having to repair your own repair equipment this time round was awesome. Keep up the great work!
not a huge fan of watching repairing videos. but you, you are making it fun and educative and also informative . love your works
F'ing love your channel and your editing... its like "How Its Made", but with usefull info
good to see you giving your best on otherwise lost cards - thank you
Each time I'm surprised by the massive effect of the thickness of the pads on thermals
My comment to show support and Appreciation for your Video is as follows. -Big Thumbs Up
such excellent work! i never tire of seeing you fix things :)
Hey mate great video love the editing keep going this way.
I want to be like you when it comes to repairing things. I have learned a lot from watching you. Thank you for posting.
Its always so therapeutic to watch the fixes.
It was very odd to see the card run so hot, and the problem was just pads being slightly to thicc.
Looking forward to the next video :D
Brilliant job!
I tried, thanks.
Great content, your repairs are awesome!
These videos are great for relieving stress as they're just so satisfying.
Im impressed by your passion for electronics!I admire people like you!
I love how this guys makes fixing a GPU down to the very core as simple as fixing a toaster. 👍
Thank you for the most entertaining repair videos on youtube and for having awesome taste in music...❤
Wow, awesome job. If that was my 4090, and you’d fixed for me. I’d say you are a Hero. I would given you big hug. Cus you deserve it. Not that I can afford 4090 here in Canada. But good job :)
Have been using liquid metal on my RTX 4080 for almost 2 years. Still rocking solid
Most importantly is all about how you apply and the amount on it. Have done it on my other older GPUs and even CPU too still work like a charm
"like new, if not better" when he could have trolled and said better than factory. The amount of restraint he had for that one is astounding.
Uhm, that is exactly what the "...if not better" part means.
You did such amazing work repairing that RTX 4090! You got my subscription and engagement. Keep up the great work!
Outstanding Skills and knowledge . The best GPU repair on the Globe ! Keep On Tony :)
Excellent work! You have to handle liquid metal with extreme care. I’ve applied it quite a few times now and learned how to handle it. But along the way had exactly this happen: a tiny speck of the stuff getting under one of the memory chips. Since then, I take more care to mask the surrounding area and apply as little as possible, adding more only if necessary. I wouldn’t recommend people using it, only if they’re enthusiasts and prepared for the consequences of a mistake.
Liquid metal is very high risk but very low rewards compared to high quality thermal paste, i personally avoid it. Specially for videocards, unless you bios hack, you're already maxed out the overclocking headroom no matter what cooling solution you use. I water blocked my 4090 only to get lower temps while more quiet, i actually underclock my card in the summer to reduce heat in the room. It isn't fun gaming next to a 700w space heater in mid summer.
@@Limitbreakur indeed, for most there will be little gain and the risk cannot be understated. I personally have a passively cooled system where it is important to get the heat away from the source as quickly as possible and prevent heat soak. Here the LM really helps. But I’ve got a regular air-cooled build where there was only a slight edge taken off the temperature curve - not worth the hassle.
@@kasimirdenhertog3516 I get the eppeal of that. I've somewhat passive cooled mine via radiator. The radiator hum is very quiet, the fans are set up to only turn on eventually. Still, i personally avoid LM but if you know what you're doing and confident then that's the best you can ask for.
I loved everything about this video.
You deserve a new SUB and a like! Very indepth checking and fixing!
Blown away by the job you do sir amazing
when you have to fix the fixxing tools, great video
after watching a few of your videos i had to sub. thank you for such interesting, intelligent, and fun videos.
This guy is so good at fixing, that he fixed his preheater while fixing a card!
3:58 Man! This was friggin sick! Cool synth “Hackerman” vibes showing how godlike you are with how much bullcrap has to be done to fix HuMON error, more of scenes and music like this!! Props to the deep pockets of 4090 owners to spend 4090 money to deliver us this content!
Excellent repair work Tony.. its nice to see physically a "no rich fix" card.. thanks for giving the opportunity to witness one. 😂👍
You truly are great! really enjoy watching your content.
I love your sense of humor. In the other way, finally someone, who checks phases with scope and do the repair, not going for easy job and ripping money for no fix as that "other" guy. SUBSCRIBED 🙂
Love your work 🎉
I will say no matter the cost you charge its not enough, I have never have watched such mastery of rebuilding boards and putting them back together like nothing! I will say if i ever do need work done i know who i will be getting a hold of!
And that’s why I conformally coated around every vram chip, the GPU core as well as anything else surrounding it that’s at risk of shorting if a mishap were to occur, before applying Liquid Metal. Such an easily avoided disaster with a little bit of forethought..and prep of course.
So Northridge wouldn't fix this? Amazing. I'm so glad I found and subbed to your channel
Your videos have become legendary with the add-ins. 😂😂 The travolta oulp fiction made me chuckle pretty good.
you make reballing a GPU processor like its nothing. amazing work
An amazing video. Somehow so relaxing to watch this
I've used "liquid metal" a long time ago. But always on cpus with a heat spreader that was lapped along with the heatsink and only used the bare minimum liquid metal that would just "wet" the metal of the CPU surface using nothing but the heat of my gloved finger... super fussy stuff and depending on the specifics of the alloy not compatible with some very common metals. There is something about two perfectly smooth metal surfaces acting like panes of glass stuck to each other with nothing but a drop of water feels so unexpected and like a science experiment. Would not use it on modern stuff. That said keeping something from becoming e-waste great work!
it always amazes me watching such Knowledge ...it really is Art!!
After those balls splitting I'll never see re-balling the same way.
Not only are You good at fixing shit but the editing is nice, too! I had some chuckles and it was pleasing to watch. I might surf for no fix/damaged card and send it to You. How much was the fix, if I may ask?
Amazing work as usual, you should be teaching these companies how to fix thier own GPUs
Great video, thank you friend!
This was super awesome!
I know the cirurgic precision, effort and tools it takes to reball these cores. But I can't help to cheer for a reball every video. My mind goes: "Reball! Reball! Reball!"
I would give you my Granny to be able to do what you do You are truly gifted Man.
My guy, you do miracles! Love your vids!
You sir, are the GPU GOD! Always amazing work that you do.
I’m a big fan of your work. I don’t own a fancy graphics card. Yet alone one that needs fixing. But your impressive skill set, logical fault finding and methodical practices? They are so calming to watch. To see faults being fixed is always enjoyable. The special videos are those where you also undo the harm inflicted by others. Your customers have their cards fixed and returned. I get to watch videos that help me unwind after a bad day. Yep, for me, seeing this healthy 4090 is good for my state of mind and my blood pressure 😂. With thanks and best wishes. And please keep the videos coming…😊
Nice! You're an angel of value! I find your videos so relaxing, as you make an impossible task to me look easy! I have a mind that continuously is searching for automation and improvements. The value you provide to the device consumers, the manufacturers (saving their brand in my view), the reduced e-waste, is so underrated. If I had the wealth I'd love to work in partnership with you to iteratively develop a fully automated system to problem solve and fix GPUs or perhaps a wide range of boards. Start with fundamental processes for solder de-solder of components as well as re-balling and cleaning pads, then the more challenging (almost artistic) work you do to repair pads and board cracks. Work on automating fault finding, etc., etc... It would be a real useful thing to process many more cards, indeed the concept could be staged for all sorts of repairs in the long term, such as data recovery or upgrades to boards, etc.. slowly expanding the business and capabilities for fixing and repairing things. Its work of the angels!
Quality content as always!
The scary movie part still lives in my head rent free after so many years. It was such a rib breaking from laughter scene that will always stick with me it seems especially when it pops up randomly as i go about my day. Instant like for using that scene 😂
If true about the nofix, cred just took a huge bump up, well done!
There are a bunch of kids on TH-cam making videos on how to coat your card and GPU core with clear nail polish so you can use liquid metal on them... I commented on 2 of the videos warning that it was a terrible idea and both content creators freaked out on me. Maybe I should link this video to them. ;)
I use lm all the time. I still believe it's stupid on these gpus
The idea isnt good - but why hate on the guide how to make it right way? This is absolutely valid and safe way to do so.
i felt like i am watching a movie, sir you are a awesome technician , you are doing gods work giving someones forever lost hard earned money back, loved the music choice you added to the video, Thank you😇
Like it. This was what I wanted to do, when I took my electronics education, 27 years ago (and still do but can't now). Fixing things that concerns just deem dead, becuse of time costs. Unfortuned I got stuck in paperwork and retakeing classes, to get the same catificates and dipommas and license again, after moving to a new country. Just becasue the new country did not approve my papers, even tho I had checked before moveing and they shoud..
I love the music drop timing.
I respect Northridge Fix, but I think your skill is light years ahead!
Big boss man has been cutting corners again…..
That was a crazy fix. The extra with the pads heigh was a nice add on.
Mate - superb work!
What Nvidia Can't you will do!
It’s like you vs the rest of the channels at GPU repairs (head shot head shot, double kill monster kill DOMINATING UNSTOPPABLE 😇GOD LIKE😇)
This man puts dedication to all his crafts
Thank you!
I cant. Ill have to buy a lot of expensive cameras and equipment to do that.
The camera i have CAN record at 4K but only internally. It does not have 4K HDMI out and i dont know what camera models do to be honest.
@@northwestrepair oh okay no problem! I enjoy your channel!!!
@@northwestrepair what was that response for ?
Man it’s always super cool when you remove the core especially with a musical selection such as here
Videos like this are why you are a true craftsman of your work. Not a hack like Northridge Fux that puts out videos making fun of people with Alzheimer’s.
so because he didnt reball an entire 4090 die hes a hack. ok
What did NRF say ? could you explain, haven't kept up with his videos
@@C0mmanderX No, that makes him a lazy pos charging way too many people no-fix fees so he can buy a million dollar home, if he has that much work, hire people.
oh man, I love the vids, Gives me hope that when my EVGA 3090 mem finally fails ( gets checker boarded for a frame every now and again) I'll see my card fixed.
"He's a Magic man! He fixes things that no one else can!" 😁
You have a great skill.
Darn! I did not know liquid metal could leak this way!
Also, did not know either that 0.2mm on thermal pad could affect temperature that much! oO
Thanks for the video!
Insanely satisfying!