Because the store/retailer/brand can say you did the "mod" and because of that your warranty is not valid.
It's a hardcore scenario, but it can happen.
You misunderstood me. I am not saying that the "mod" will become a source of failure. I am saying that if the card fails for whatever reason, it could become a problem when tech support at your retailer or the AIB inspect your card for signs of tempering before considering any repair. You would have to trust these people to remember about this batch or to even have been advised about it. If it happened in the next 6 months you may be fine but what about in 2 years time?
Why would you take any additional risk for the mistake of somebody else? Why not wait a few weeks before buying the card? That's what I am saying, hopefully it is clearer now :)
It has nothing to do with waiting. It has everything to do with the cost of scrapping the cards!
The delay has less to do with this anyways, than it does with the 32nm debacle.
Is this somebody know if the gigabyte cards have got the same crude modification ?
This oughta knock the ATI fanboy's down a peg. Unfortunately it also raises the Nvidia fanboy's 2 pegs. Wonder if there's a file for that....
i dont care, i would file it myself when i do a cooler mod :)
i find its a good move, they have more cards in stock earlier is what counts in for sales. If they did a good deal with whoever is responsible its even more clever..
I agree with Oese. I don't care about the connector corner being hand sanded off either. You can only see it if the card is out of your case and you look really hard at it. It doesn't effect the performance of the card. If any of you had ownership in AMD you would have sanded it to. I am sure it is more than lets just re-solder this connector over here. They would probably have to do some redesigning to the PCB board, moving components around. That would have required too much time initially and also would waste perfect boards which means a lot of money wasted. NVIDIA already had their gtx series out and AMD needed to get theirs out on the market. I could care less about the corner. Mine work perfect.
I don't see why anyone is complaining about this. What if they didn't sand off the corners of the connector. Then you guys would really have something to complain about. What if they initially scrapped all those boards and made a revision board. That would have taken months of time to do and yet everyone would be still complaining. They definitely made the ideal choice, both for AMD's business and for the consumers who were eagerly awaiting the new 6900 series.
they couldnt just make a different cooler?
look at date of the other posts
Yeah they may have been able to do that, but the best course of action was to simply just file the connector end. To make a new cooler, first it would have needed to be designed, then from paper to the plant to be manufactured. Those things take time to complete. They might not have had all the materials in house and would have to order them, and then, they would need time to test the cooler (and the cooler performed as they wanted to so why change something that already worked), and etc... Not only would that have been time consuming, but also costly to do. I am an engineer but you don't require an engineering degree to figure this out.
Could anyone confirm whether the MSI 6950 Twin FrozR II being affected or not?
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/pimg/G..._34803_400.jpg
They could have saved the time on mine. Mine is water cooled as of about a week ago, Yay! I have a sapphire 6970 with the filing and I'm not concerned. I'd be surprised if any of the non reference cards are "affected" sniper sung but again why worry about it it's just the plastic that is filed a bit and not even to the point where the pins are exposed: it's through one of the 2 walls.