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I thought that was with their Z690 boards, not AM5.Asus has an issue with a cap being reversed polarity recently causing system fires as well.
I agree on the larger cache having an effect, but based on personal experience and a combination of 7950x and 7950x3d, I believe its BAD BIOS FROM ASUS. And possible others. But ASRock has been solid so far for me, and ASUS (for memory compatibility) has been bad.Yeah... definitely has to do with the larger cache, and higher boosting draw.
The FPGA i think was not intended or designed for that much amps.
This is why Intel went though god knows how many different pin layout / revisions / updates to perfect that slot.
I remember how many of us wanted to really kill intel when they said no new boards ~
This was on LGA1155, because we all got mad they had to change the entire board for 1 friggin pin.
Then they did it to us again, on LGA1150, but at least it was more then 1 pin... however... again on LGA1151, and yup... guessed it again... LGA1200.
I am guessing Intel saw this coming from LGA1156 -> LGA1155.
Then saw it again on LGA1150, and had to put in a extra for LGA1151.
You're spot on but, who's to say that it didn't happen again. Other boards had UEFI issues. Always a good idea to give things a couple of weeks post release to see the reviews from buyers and not reviewers. Could just be a bad batch from a qa standpoint. To me though it seems like AMD likes guinea pigs on new releases. I'd rather be under promised and over delivered than the other way around. Start stable and add features with UEFI updates as they're tested a bit more thoroughly.I thought that was with their Z690 boards, not AM5.
you mean, like a re-hash of Lotes versus foxxconn sockets?it seems like the type of damage happening would have to be due to something other than slightly too aggressive voltages
Lol! Good memory!you mean, like a re-hash of Lotes versus foxxconn sockets?
The, or any, bios just reveals the issue, if the CPU has no protections against even a little bit more Voltage then that is a serious design flaw. Or cash grab depending on how cynical you are.If I had to guess, it’s pre-X3D bios creating these issues where they would frequently boost SoC voltage amongst other things for Expo compatibility and general stability.
The guy on Reddit that created that thread was running BIOS 0805 when his CPU blew up (early pre-X3D BIOS) since he said the newer releases couldn’t run EXPO.
Read the top comment on the reddit thread. The user is implying that Asus and Gigabyte BIOS automatically sets SOC and VDDIO voltages to 1.36-1.4 V, sometimes boosting to even 1.5 V in Windows, when EXPO is enabled. The regular chips can handle it. The X3D cannot.
We may see a new revision of the current boards when Zen 5 comes out but i'm not expecting a new socket maybe for Zen 6 and that is still a maybe as they said AM5 will go to 2025+New Socket for 8000 series Ryzen... Im calling it.
Days of boards lasting more then 1 builds are OVER~
We may see a new revision of the current boards when Zen 5 comes out but i'm not expecting a new socket maybe for Zen 6 and that is still a maybe as they said AM5 will go to 2025+