Last week, a Taiwanese overclocker putting his OC workbench through an
relatively laxed OC stress test saw its Gigabyte X79 UD3 motherboard go
bust. Its CPU VRM couldn't cope with the stress, and blew a MOSFET. At
the time, people responding to his video condoled him for his bad luck.
It appears now that his wasn't a one-off case of "bad-egg". Gigabyte, in
its latest press release on its Chinese website, noted the issue.
Apparently it received several such complaints from overclockers where
even moderate voltage-assisted CPU OC fried its VRM. The issue was found
to be widespread, among three of its main socket LGA2011 products, the
GA-X79-UD3, GA-X79-UD5, and G1.Assassin 2.
Apparently, the issue is caused by a cocktail of bad firmware to
complement the board's PWM circuitry, and bad quality PWM components. As
an immediate remedy, Gigabyte issued a BIOS update for the affected
products. This BIOS, however, will cripple the board's overclocking
abilities. The new BIOS will throttle CPU when subjected to extreme
stress, to save the VRM. The BIOS remedy is only for those who opt to
keep their boards, or don't subject the board to extreme tuning. The
other remedy, is to return the board to Gigabyte, for a free replacement
when the "right" boards are available. Gigabyte also announced a
general recall of the GA-X79-UD3, GA-X79-UD5, and G1.Assassin 2, from
the market. A video of the "unlucky" (not anymore) overclocker's day
going bad, can be watched here.
Source: Gigabyte
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