What makes this funnier is that the width of my phone is just perfect so that the second eye doesnt fit and is instead in a new line, making it look like the face snapped just like the GPU in the video lmao
This can't be a coincidence. I'm 99% sure engineers thought of that when making motherboards. God bless them. I can't imagine how intelligent you must be to come up with such a safe design.
wake up!! we are about to enter tribulation and the Christian church has completely mislead you, you need to repent so God doesn't pour his wrath out on you we are required to keep the Sabbath (Isaiah 56, acts 13:42-44) and to not eat pork (Isaiah 66, acts 15) Paul specified in Galatians 3:19 that sacrificial law ended meaning we are still bound by the holy covenants we still have to keep the ten commandments Matthew 5:19 in Ephesians 2:12-13 it says we are grafted into Israel meaning the prophecy and covenants given to Israel still apply to us and Isaiah 11:11-13 says that you are apart of the lost sheep of Israel christmas easter halloween are unbiblical idolatry, christ wasn't even born in December and these celebrations come from paganism such as yule, saturnalia and ishtar The trinity is an unbiblical idolatrous doctrine (numbers 23:19, mark 10:18, Matthew 26:39) the messiah's name is Yeshua not Jesus read John 5:42-43 about this
that's due to bad pcb design and not the weight of the card. a ground plane there and not running 5v through the weakest part of the board would fix everything
@@dallagen3423 It's not only the 5v plane that runs through there, a pcb has many layers, and the dumbos at Gigabyte thought it was a good idea to run some memory lanes underneath the 5v lane, so yeah, you're right, but Gigabyte shows even more incompetence than you thought i think ;)
Doesn’t hurt to put there, also probably doesn’t take very long to install either. If anything it just ensures you don’t lose the bracket in some random drawer
Uh. The average weight of a 7900 XTX is 1.8 kg. I don't think people were even considering brackets when the ASUS Mars II or the Powercolor Devil 13 came out. And these two weigh 2.3 Kg.
if you havethe chance to have in there go for it i have 7800XT and came with a bracket i installed it just in case it aint going anywhere it will take you around 5 minutes to fix it in place
It's not even scientific, it's just seeing the maximum load a PCIe slot can take before things break. Overtime tho, that 2 - 3 - 4lb GPU (or in the RTX 4090's case nearly 5 lbs), will slowly bend the PCIe slot downwards & off the motherboard. It takes a couple months, but it can happen if the GPU has no proper support.
Nah that's not the PCIe slot, that's the screws holding it to the vents in the back of the PC. That's also where the failure happened, the GPU ripped the back of the case off. PCIe can't hold any weight.
I also have seen broken PCX slots on costumer PC´s over the years. Please do not forget, that plastic does get instable and drys out over time. Some GPU did bend down because of their own weights and I have even seen corrupted slots , that begun to snap as well.
Pretty much useless info. We have no idea how much deformation and under which loads it can reasonably take. Particularly as a gpu will be used in the long term. The only conclusion we have here is to not sit down on the gpu or slam it. 😅
What a relief. I’m new to PC building and was super worried every time I put a little more pressure on something than was necessary. Didn’t know they were that durable.
The solution might be that the motherboard and other things are being attached to the GPU instead the other way around. Or they become so big and heavy they have they own gravity and your house will orbit around the GPU. 😂
Run it at load, with heat bonds soften. Overtime it may cause stability issues as the slot sags. It’s akin to long running computers where cards/DIMMs back themselves out slightly either due to vibrations or hot/cold cycles. Lastly that particular motherboard may have been reinforced around load brackets areas. Parts are unlikely to catastrophically fail overtime, it’s the subtle failures that cause the most grief.
Pal GPU sag is a scam and only a Marketing campaign!! It will never crack, on its own have you ever heard of a GPU that did? It's just to sell more products. If the GPUs getting heavier so will the material which supports the GPU because if not and the gpu gets destroyed the company exposes themselves to a lot of lawsuits and the competition isn't sleeping.
Or more likely the clip/screws are designed in such a way that they will fail first. Don't forget the screw points also have slots instead of just a simple hole. Maybe they serve more purpose than helping you align the screws.
Silicon is actually quite durable and flexible. Especially in older components. Collecting e-waste from old boards is a lot harder than on newer boards.
This makes me feel better as I for some reason thought my motherboard pcie would be feeling unwell after 5 years of unsupported strix gpu. Should be fine 🥰
For all those who use Si measurements, it is 7.71 KG. But I may be wrong because the measurement value in pounds may have different values in different countries. Because it can be: -troy pound -pound tower -Merchants' pound -Carolingian pound -Russian pound -New Poland pound -common pound -metric pound -e.t.c.. The value ranges from 0.373kg to 1kg But since this is probably America, the value given at the beginning will be corrected.
I hope people realize that you still need to take precautions when dealing with some of the more massive modern GPUs. We've already had the huge string of GPUs that have had their PCB and subsequent traces damaged by over stressed parts. Not to mention that the PCIe slot on the MB is basically just held in by solder
The point is that the test was kind of useful, The more time a heavy gpu stays like that there will be consequences. To justify nothing will happen wearing braces for an hour or a day but wearing them on a daily bases for an year plus may show some signifucant results. CONCLUSION: WEIGHT MATTERS AS WELL AS THE TIME PERIOD THE GPU STAYS LIKE THAT WITH NO SUPPORT.
@@SantosOTWI was going to say "not bad" but I realized it's an 8gb card. That card new is probably only around $300. The CPU is a little over $200. Ram is cheap. So I'd have to say no on that "deal". So parts wise, you're looking at about $600 from what you've stated. So it's not really a deal. For about $600 it would be. Because of the case, mobo, SDD or HDD, fans etc... I don't think $800 is a great price.
@@JayBigDadyCy@JayBigDadyCy So you'd want the builder only to barely break even or more likely to lose money? Gotta find some real cheap ass ram, mobo, psu, case and storage for $100 combined.
So the slot isn't the only thing supporting a GPU. The chassis is supposed to as well and my bet is if you screwed it into the chassis it would have held way more weight.
That's true, though it is also true that even when you see no play (flex, bend, stretch) immediately, it can develop over time with just the weight of the card, depending on what card and board, I suppose... I imagine a brace or support isn't ACTUALLY necessary for most... but since ZOTAC sent me one anyway I'm happy to use it. (at least ZOTAC's brace matches the inside of my case pretty well) I can't say I've ever had sag actually harm any of my hardware in the past, before I ever used a brace, but if something that quick and easy can prevent the potentiality, it's use is still a no-brainer.
@@JustAPriapism That screw is not a screw that can hold weight. So the first two PCIe slot cover screws are in the case the first screw is holding a slot cover not the card. We haven't used that slot in mainstream boards for years. The seconds screw goes into a slot on the PCIe bracket meaning other than friction it's not supporting the card. The third screw is the screw that would support any weight that is not there. It actually goes into a hole in the bracket.
@@MaheerKibria Im starting to strongly believe that no one that watched this video actually watched any of, either that or needs to visit their optometrist. o.0 The top 2 screws, one is in the case, the other is in the card slot. That card, only has one bracket slot, you can clearly see it if you actually watch the video, you can actually see the "U" slot on the card, slide down behind the 2nd screw when it pulls out. That card only has 2 slots to begin with, one resting, one tension, just because you have seen a card with 3 slots doesnt mean that every card has them, the card he is using is old and outdated, and this entire arguement is moot anyway as regardless, even if it was bolted in 3 slots and had a support pillar underneath it, at some point, with enough weight, it would still fail. But that doesnt matter, that wasnt the point of the video, the premise was already well supported by the fact the amount of weight they used was well over any amount you would/could ever feasibly stress any card with under normal circumstances. Its all irrelevent.
It's really bad if that clip breaks off. The port may seem fine but it likely isn't. The PCIE traces can get broken or stretched, effectively ruining the very precise timing between the GPU and PCIE system. So, don't use a motherboard with a broken clip. I know this because I've done it. And it worked, but kept having issues.
When it fell I didn’t flinch, the pc being powered with no cpu cooler, and the weights directly against the unprotected back of the card is what got me
top of the pci slot cover slipped (due to the way that area is designed, and it apparently didn't get screwed down the way it should have been. both screw holes, not just top 'top' one), and the weight pulled it down and out while bending the pci mounting assembly. this didn't fail the same way a heavy card would over time.
This makes a lot of sense, actually. These parts are expensive, so making the point of failure the clip that holds it in place makes it less likely for anything to break in an especially expensive way.
That turned out really okay-ish. If i ever found my gpu ripped from the motherboard, and this was the damage i saw, i'd be so relieved I'd start dancing.
i love the experiment, but it's important to note for those new to PC building that the GPU can definitely be damaged well before the point of falling out of the motherboard. Even a microscopic fracture to the PCB can total a card, so maybe keep it at 1-2 plates for your home setup
People says this hurts them. I feel amazing seeing this video, it confirms that my worries about my heavy ass 3X gpu cracking itself are false, i'm free now.
What a major coincidence, my GPU fell out of the PCI port during transit bc the screw holding it down wasn’t tight enough, surprisingly no damage! Strange that I came across this video the same day that happened
Sometimes it's the freaking board that breaks. (that thingy that holds onto the slot's locking mechanism. Sometimes it's that thing that breaks) not to mention bending already means damage and possibly requires reballing.
This is a non issue now, there are some magnetic GPU support brackets. I use one in my case and it has adjustable brackets, can even support 2 GPUs, I got mine on Amazon and very happy with it.
they really should start shipping brick GPU like those , with support stand for it , bracket to bolt in and a standing one .then you can chose when you have it , what fits best - oh well
Absolutely none of your videos have disturbed me more than this one
you're welcome (I'm sorry)
@@mryeester at the start i thought that you would put weights on a modern gpu 😳
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
Its not the PCIE slot or clip. Its the circuit boards tab that the clip uses breaking and severing power traces. Thus rendering the GPU bricked.
I'm gonna send a swat team to your current location for this :)
I violently flinched when it broke. This hurt me on a spiritual level.
You might say, it hurt your 'spirit level'
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
I did too. That physical hurt me
you gotta give it to him tho. this is strictly a science experiment to answer questions that have been out there
@@cigano7106 he shouldvedone it on a non functioning motherboard man, this was painful to watch 😂😂
“What’s your pc benchmark results ?”
“4 plates”
“What ?”
“You heard me.”
bro..
Does your PC even lift?
real " bench "
PC bench press
🤣🤣🤣🤣
“Do you even lift bro”
Gpu:”yes”
that would be the motherboard
It sinks.
The CPU is just chilling there being warm.
She be like 😎☀️
@@supporterluxjur7157 Fr
Warm is probably an understatement, but if I had to guess, they're just idling in BIOS or something
Is it chilling or being warm? Make up your mind
@@supporterluxjur7157 she? 🤨
"Things continue to look okay"
The GPU: 👁️
👃 👁️
XD
Lookin kinda like Zooble from TADC. XD
@@CodinPenguin oh God your one of those kids
Wdym? 🥲@@ffgg-566g
🤣🤣🤣🤣
The customer coming back to pick up his PC: 👁️👄👁️
He be like, "hey, checkout this cool short I made on your pc."
@@NaofumiSama lololol
“guys my pc was in yeester’s video”
@@NaofumiSamalooooool
What makes this funnier is that the width of my phone is just perfect so that the second eye doesnt fit and is instead in a new line, making it look like the face snapped just like the GPU in the video lmao
This is hurting so hard
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
Same
[Edited to comply with guidelines]
@@dustuxThat's a RX 460 GPU. That card is pocket change lol
Stay mad
@@aleu4618 That GPU may be cheap, but he also destroyed the motherboard
Me : I can't afford gpu
This guy : using as a toy
This can't be a coincidence. I'm 99% sure engineers thought of that when making motherboards.
God bless them. I can't imagine how intelligent you must be to come up with such a safe design.
wake up!! we are about to enter tribulation and the Christian church has completely mislead you, you need to repent so God doesn't pour his wrath out on you
we are required to keep the Sabbath (Isaiah 56, acts 13:42-44)
and to not eat pork (Isaiah 66, acts 15)
Paul specified in Galatians 3:19 that sacrificial law ended meaning we are still bound by the holy covenants
we still have to keep the ten commandments Matthew 5:19
in Ephesians 2:12-13 it says we are grafted into Israel meaning the prophecy and covenants given to Israel still apply to us
and Isaiah 11:11-13 says that you are apart of the lost sheep of Israel
christmas easter halloween are unbiblical idolatry, christ wasn't even born in December and these celebrations come from paganism such as yule, saturnalia and ishtar
The trinity is an unbiblical idolatrous doctrine (numbers 23:19, mark 10:18, Matthew 26:39)
the messiah's name is Yeshua not Jesus read John 5:42-43 about this
Is this sarcasm? My friend's pci slot broke from it (his PC was droped), not visually, but any videocard after this will not work in that slot
@@男の娘-b2h
Not all motherboards have the same thought put into them, unfortunately.
@@Dantido it was an Asus motherboard, they make best ones.
dropping a case can cause a lot more tention on pcie slot than 17lbs or 8kg which the videos shows
Ok now you gotta test that gpu if it's still working
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
@@ericmamleevbot spamming
he probably test it with already broken gpu. no sane people will test it with working gpu.
@@ricoLbrcyoutuber aren’t usually sane
@@RurouniHiroThis guy is usually sane though. He generally tests experiments on old unwanted cards.
17lbs = 7.7kg for the rest of the world
Thanks man I don't speak american
Most valuable comment😂
MVP
lbs>kg
What the fuck is a kilogram
Meanwhile Gigabyte cards are literally cracking the PCBs under their own weight
that's due to bad pcb design and not the weight of the card. a ground plane there and not running 5v through the weakest part of the board would fix everything
@@TL-xv1fduntil it is 😂
@@Nicolo-ue9xuTop 10 stupidest comments:
@@Nicolo-ue9xu 🖐️Support bracket 🤚
@@dallagen3423 It's not only the 5v plane that runs through there, a pcb has many layers, and the dumbos at Gigabyte thought it was a good idea to run some memory lanes underneath the 5v lane, so yeah, you're right, but Gigabyte shows even more incompetence than you thought i think ;)
My new 7900XTX came with a bracket and I've been stressing out about not installing it. I'll sleep better having seen this.
Bare in mind this test doesn't test longevity at these weights.
Doesn’t hurt to put there, also probably doesn’t take very long to install either. If anything it just ensures you don’t lose the bracket in some random drawer
Uh. The average weight of a 7900 XTX is 1.8 kg. I don't think people were even considering brackets when the ASUS Mars II or the Powercolor Devil 13 came out. And these two weigh 2.3 Kg.
I keep everything in the box and have been watching for sag.@@solkvist8668
if you havethe chance to have in there go for it i have 7800XT and came with a bracket i installed it just in case it aint going anywhere it will take you around 5 minutes to fix it in place
"With the rise of heavy GPUs", shows my exact Zotac 980 ti AMP! Extreme haha
It's not about how well your pc can run it, it's about how much it can lift
Real
fr
Lifting PC > Cardio PC
This was the most painful but necessary video i have ever watched.
It's not even scientific, it's just seeing the maximum load a PCIe slot can take before things break.
Overtime tho, that 2 - 3 - 4lb GPU (or in the RTX 4090's case nearly 5 lbs), will slowly bend the PCIe slot downwards & off the motherboard. It takes a couple months, but it can happen if the GPU has no proper support.
Those pcie slots are really strong, I didn’t expect that!
Nah that's not the PCIe slot, that's the screws holding it to the vents in the back of the PC. That's also where the failure happened, the GPU ripped the back of the case off. PCIe can't hold any weight.
@@npip99 looks to me like he didn't put the screws in at the back
The amount of pain I felt
no pain no gains
I also have seen broken PCX slots on costumer PC´s over the years. Please do not forget, that plastic does get instable and drys out over time. Some GPU did bend down because of their own weights and I have even seen corrupted slots , that begun to snap as well.
It hurts to the core but it is interesting to see the experiment and realize the weight it can support and apparently they are quite resistant
Except he didn't screw it in properly so this doesn't tells us much at all about actual GPU use.
Pretty much useless info. We have no idea how much deformation and under which loads it can reasonably take. Particularly as a gpu will be used in the long term.
The only conclusion we have here is to not sit down on the gpu or slam it. 😅
I need to go to therapy now. Had me screaming holy shit 💀
OMGGG SSAAMEE
It is more about chronic bending of pci slot a gpu under gpus weight.
Acute traumas, as you shown, can be comensated by this point of failure.
What a relief. I’m new to PC building and was super worried every time I put a little more pressure on something than was necessary. Didn’t know they were that durable.
Wow I meeded this short, always treated the pcie slot as some fragile piece, good to know it is sturdier than I thought.
Remember kids... Don't try this at home
ya think i was planning to or smth??
This made me visibly upset
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
@@ericmamleev Nice dude
Future GPUs probably having more and more weight over the next years, not just bigger size
*Folks, I took off the 23 one arm pull ups* *Support the people*
I would assume that motherboard/case manufacturers will most likely have a solution for this
yea they will probably start putting support beams @@tylerrowe3671
The solution might be that the motherboard and other things are being attached to the GPU instead the other way around.
Or they become so big and heavy they have they own gravity and your house will orbit around the GPU. 😂
nice name
The fact that i dont have a pc and have been thinking about getting the cash to build one, seeing this makes me feel emotions i never thought i had.
There are so many things wrong with this . What a mad man. You didn’t even turn the thing off to do this
Considering it wasn't screwed in this is surprisingly good
Run it at load, with heat bonds soften. Overtime it may cause stability issues as the slot sags. It’s akin to long running computers where cards/DIMMs back themselves out slightly either due to vibrations or hot/cold cycles. Lastly that particular motherboard may have been reinforced around load brackets areas. Parts are unlikely to catastrophically fail overtime, it’s the subtle failures that cause the most grief.
What?
How is this relevant to this video?
@@iamerror1699 yeah, you’re right that it has nothing to do with this video.
@@MrHasie I think that was quite informative tbh.
Pal GPU sag is a scam and only a Marketing campaign!! It will never crack, on its own have you ever heard of a GPU that did? It's just to sell more products. If the GPUs getting heavier so will the material which supports the GPU because if not and the gpu gets destroyed the company exposes themselves to a lot of lawsuits and the competition isn't sleeping.
Or more likely the clip/screws are designed in such a way that they will fail first. Don't forget the screw points also have slots instead of just a simple hole. Maybe they serve more purpose than helping you align the screws.
Silicon is actually quite durable and flexible. Especially in older components. Collecting e-waste from old boards is a lot harder than on newer boards.
If you’ve got a 17 pound GPU and you don’t have a GPU stand what tf are you doing with your life?
This makes me feel better as I for some reason thought my motherboard pcie would be feeling unwell after 5 years of unsupported strix gpu. Should be fine 🥰
For all those who use Si measurements, it is 7.71 KG.
But I may be wrong because the measurement value in pounds may have different values in different countries.
Because it can be:
-troy pound
-pound tower
-Merchants' pound
-Carolingian pound
-Russian pound
-New Poland pound
-common pound
-metric pound
-e.t.c..
The value ranges from
0.373kg to 1kg
But since this is probably America, the value given at the beginning will be corrected.
you never fail to make my day worse
"saggy bits" just got a whole new meaning.
That GPU bench more than 99% of PC gamers
That part actually broke for me thankfully i had another slot
Mine came off but I was able to put it back on
Ive never been called poor so harshly before
“Thats not too BA-“
I hope people realize that you still need to take precautions when dealing with some of the more massive modern GPUs.
We've already had the huge string of GPUs that have had their PCB and subsequent traces damaged by over stressed parts. Not to mention that the PCIe slot on the MB is basically just held in by solder
Looks like we finally got the bendmark we all have been waiting for.
Scarier than every horror movie
The point is that the test was kind of useful, The more time a heavy gpu stays like that there will be consequences. To justify nothing will happen wearing braces for an hour or a day but wearing them on a daily bases for an year plus may show some signifucant results. CONCLUSION: WEIGHT MATTERS AS WELL AS THE TIME PERIOD THE GPU STAYS LIKE THAT WITH NO SUPPORT.
Use a anti gpu sag bracket that comes with the white gigabyte 4070 ti
Also comes with MSI rtx4080 its excellent when installed right.
a pc builder in my town is selling a rtx 4060 8gb with i7 10700f, 16gb ram for 800$ is that good? I’m buying my first PC THANKS
@@SantosOTW That is a very fair price tbh. Definelty worth the money. You can a lot of new games with no issues
@@SantosOTWI was going to say "not bad" but I realized it's an 8gb card. That card new is probably only around $300. The CPU is a little over $200. Ram is cheap. So I'd have to say no on that "deal". So parts wise, you're looking at about $600 from what you've stated. So it's not really a deal. For about $600 it would be. Because of the case, mobo, SDD or HDD, fans etc... I don't think $800 is a great price.
@@JayBigDadyCy@JayBigDadyCy So you'd want the builder only to barely break even or more likely to lose money? Gotta find some real cheap ass ram, mobo, psu, case and storage for $100 combined.
Trees lookin fine and while driving might hug em with my car tonight
Proof that a GPU support bracket is not ever needed.
So the slot isn't the only thing supporting a GPU. The chassis is supposed to as well and my bet is if you screwed it into the chassis it would have held way more weight.
Thank god someone else noticed. I thought I was the only one.
That's true, though it is also true that even when you see no play (flex, bend, stretch) immediately, it can develop over time with just the weight of the card, depending on what card and board, I suppose...
I imagine a brace or support isn't ACTUALLY necessary for most... but since ZOTAC sent me one anyway I'm happy to use it. (at least ZOTAC's brace matches the inside of my case pretty well)
I can't say I've ever had sag actually harm any of my hardware in the past, before I ever used a brace, but if something that quick and easy can prevent the potentiality, it's use is still a no-brainer.
yall need to get your eyes checked, the 2nd screw on the back of the pci slots are on the card .... check with your optometrist
@@JustAPriapism That screw is not a screw that can hold weight. So the first two PCIe slot cover screws are in the case the first screw is holding a slot cover not the card. We haven't used that slot in mainstream boards for years. The seconds screw goes into a slot on the PCIe bracket meaning other than friction it's not supporting the card. The third screw is the screw that would support any weight that is not there. It actually goes into a hole in the bracket.
@@MaheerKibria Im starting to strongly believe that no one that watched this video actually watched any of, either that or needs to visit their optometrist. o.0 The top 2 screws, one is in the case, the other is in the card slot. That card, only has one bracket slot, you can clearly see it if you actually watch the video, you can actually see the "U" slot on the card, slide down behind the 2nd screw when it pulls out. That card only has 2 slots to begin with, one resting, one tension, just because you have seen a card with 3 slots doesnt mean that every card has them, the card he is using is old and outdated, and this entire arguement is moot anyway as regardless, even if it was bolted in 3 slots and had a support pillar underneath it, at some point, with enough weight, it would still fail. But that doesnt matter, that wasnt the point of the video, the premise was already well supported by the fact the amount of weight they used was well over any amount you would/could ever feasibly stress any card with under normal circumstances. Its all irrelevent.
It's really bad if that clip breaks off. The port may seem fine but it likely isn't. The PCIE traces can get broken or stretched, effectively ruining the very precise timing between the GPU and PCIE system. So, don't use a motherboard with a broken clip. I know this because I've done it. And it worked, but kept having issues.
I love the horizontal motherboard cases where both the giant CPU coolers and giant GPU coolers are non issues
I was about to make a your mom joke but i snapped from it
this got me feeling like
One day, your knees will buckle under the weight of your endless sins. I will not be there to save you.
When it fell I didn’t flinch, the pc being powered with no cpu cooler, and the weights directly against the unprotected back of the card is what got me
This shows the importance of having a GPU holder. They can be very heavy if high end and cause issues overtime.
Well this is quite good for a GPU that was not even screwed in.
top of the pci slot cover slipped (due to the way that area is designed, and it apparently didn't get screwed down the way it should have been. both screw holes, not just top 'top' one), and the weight pulled it down and out while bending the pci mounting assembly.
this didn't fail the same way a heavy card would over time.
911 what’s your emergency?
This man right here officer
wow it's crazy how this tiny piece is so tough
Thats why we use additional support for heavy ass gpus even when they dont need it
This makes a lot of sense, actually. These parts are expensive, so making the point of failure the clip that holds it in place makes it less likely for anything to break in an especially expensive way.
That turned out really okay-ish.
If i ever found my gpu ripped from the motherboard, and this was the damage i saw, i'd be so relieved I'd start dancing.
Lol, you mythbursted my fear of a broken PCI. I have been placing my case horizontally.
i love the experiment, but it's important to note for those new to PC building that the GPU can definitely be damaged well before the point of falling out of the motherboard. Even a microscopic fracture to the PCB can total a card, so maybe keep it at 1-2 plates for your home setup
People says this hurts them. I feel amazing seeing this video, it confirms that my worries about my heavy ass 3X gpu cracking itself are false, i'm free now.
the rise of heavier gpus is why i support the return of horizontal mobo cases.
How’s the benchmark going
This guy: My gpu is pushing 4 plates
that gpu falling at the start of the video made me want to die
Rtx 6080 be like:
*6090
@@ZakiUlQadar *8090
@@ZakiUlQadar ill buy that gpu entirely for the sexy sex number
@@GigaCoderDude*9090
@@M4rio21*42090
This is a type of video that no one needed but everyone wants to stay to watch the result lol
Otherway round, you mean the video that no one wanted, but everyone needed to watch ;)
What a major coincidence, my GPU fell out of the PCI port during transit bc the screw holding it down wasn’t tight enough, surprisingly no damage! Strange that I came across this video the same day that happened
Some people's toys, some people's dreams
why is youtube showing me related to my own cabinet is it telling something is gonna happen to my cabinet?
Okay now you can claim your warranty. 😂
I coughed as soon as that thing fell
the amount i physically cringed watching that thing break off omg
Sometimes it's the freaking board that breaks. (that thingy that holds onto the slot's locking mechanism. Sometimes it's that thing that breaks) not to mention bending already means damage and possibly requires reballing.
This is a non issue now, there are some magnetic GPU support brackets. I use one in my case and it has adjustable brackets, can even support 2 GPUs, I got mine on Amazon and very happy with it.
This video makes my pockets SCREECH
Bro called us broke in 12946026343634678 languages
U not us
"these are valid question" he said 💀💀💀
“It’s just standing there….MENACINGLY!!!”
Your experiments are too funny😂
As soon as you put one weight on it my whole body writhed in agony
Literally two dumbbell weights would have been enough 😂
putting weights on the gpu: 😊
seeing no cable connected to PCIe connector: 💀
4090 “hold my beer”
When a content creator runs out of material to produce we get this type of video.
i mean these gpus are now heavy enough to crack their pcbs, so that means this gpu is just built different.
U would think multi billion dollar companies would have included this in their design
هر روز دلسوز تر از دیروز
عشقی سینا کاش همه ببینن این ویدیو رو
they really should start shipping brick GPU like those , with support stand for it , bracket to bolt in and a standing one .then you can chose when you have it , what fits best
- oh well
The latch breaking first must be a safety feature or something
One more short before bed:
The short:
"I want my graphic card pin to be always touched tight in the motherboard"
Proof that “gpu sag” is a myth. Doesn’t matter how much it sags
"Things continue to look okay"
Meanwhile, the pc is having a stroke
The direction of force is very important here. I ripped out my entire pcie slot in my early days of PC building because I forgot about that clip lol
My GPU will be getting in a strong workout after this