Originally posted by: shinzwei
ahah! i just got it from a recent trade. he watercooled the card and there are like black residue on the card....but i took it all of and now the card is sticky....like in back of a sticker if ur smeer the sticky part.
Originally posted by: shinzwei
well still noone has answered the question. there just saying things i dont wanna hear.
Originally posted by: cronic
electrowash by chemtronics.
http://www.matelectronics.com/acatalog/...ronics_Chemicals___Chemtronics_49.html
next time please refrain from asking how to rma something that should not qualify for rma under the manufactures rules.
Originally posted by: SketchMaster
Umm, correct me if I'm wrong but he didn't OC the card. It may have been the guy before him that OC'ed it. Do we even know why he is having to RMA it?
You guys want someone to flame, go flame me.
Originally posted by: SketchMaster
Umm, correct me if I'm wrong but he didn't OC the card. It may have been the guy before him that OC'ed it. Do we even know why he is having to RMA it?
You guys want someone to flame, go flame me.
Originally posted by: tuteja1986
I clean my whole computer with air vacuum. It takes out dust from CPU fan to HDD slots. Its makes your box look totally new ...
Originally posted by: kmmatney
I don't see how overclocking a card would void the warranty. My MSI 6600GT came with overclocking software built into the drivers. There was a warning message of some sort (I didn't read it all), but if the card was to fry from using the built-in overclocking, I would have no bad conscuous RMAing it.
I've never actually heard of a card going bad just from overclocking. I've seen artifacts and system hang-ups, but every card I've ever used has always recovered after a reboot, or by lowering the speeds back down. Never, ever had one outright fail from overclocking it too high.
Originally posted by: Rollo
Originally posted by: kmmatney
I don't see how overclocking a card would void the warranty. My MSI 6600GT came with overclocking software built into the drivers. There was a warning message of some sort (I didn't read it all), but if the card was to fry from using the built-in overclocking, I would have no bad conscuous RMAing it.
I've never actually heard of a card going bad just from overclocking. I've seen artifacts and system hang-ups, but every card I've ever used has always recovered after a reboot, or by lowering the speeds back down. Never, ever had one outright fail from overclocking it too high.
The message tells you that you're voiding your warranty using the OCing utility on almost all brands.
So whether you would "feel bad" or not, you would be stealing from the company and the rest of us.