*Warning* this video is NOT a JOKE

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @farvatron
    @farvatron Рік тому +2749

    He had to literally debug it! Awesome!

    • @northwestrepair
      @northwestrepair  Рік тому +247

      lol good one 🤣

    • @bumbaclot813
      @bumbaclot813 Рік тому +23

      That was insane.

    • @RickR69
      @RickR69 Рік тому +39

      @@northwestrepair Man I have very basic soldering skills and I have very little idea of what's happening in your videos, but holy crap do I enjoy them.
      I think people working on Mark IIs would get a kick out of you debugging a modern day compute unit just as they did back in the day. I love your videos, please keep them up!

    • @Edgeman81
      @Edgeman81 Рік тому +16

      Flythere's edition 😂

    • @andrewvirtue5048
      @andrewvirtue5048 Рік тому +26

      That's actually where the term comes from in software.

  • @techyescity
    @techyescity Рік тому +25

    You reballed a 4090? dude you are the goat.

  • @brotakul
    @brotakul 3 місяці тому +65

    My 4090 is just safe sitting on some store's shelf I cannot reach. It's reassuring.

  • @mikekleiner3741
    @mikekleiner3741 Рік тому +1084

    That is insane. You would think their 'clean' rooms at their OEM would be clean.

    • @davidlong1786
      @davidlong1786 Рік тому +81

      You expect a perfect world I presume.

    • @hristiqndimitrov5249
      @hristiqndimitrov5249 Рік тому +35

      ​@@davidlong1786i completely agree
      It's impossible that at one point during assembly and packaging there won't be something

    • @ArtisChronicles
      @ArtisChronicles Рік тому +130

      Bugs find a way to get into everything. No matter how clean you try to keep it.

    • @rinner2801
      @rinner2801 Рік тому +122

      I'm quite sure this bug crawled in long after the card was manufactured.

    • @spg3331
      @spg3331 Рік тому +44

      He said at the beginning that it was a resale place it was purchased at maybe it happened there

  • @destinacecilia4422
    @destinacecilia4422 Рік тому +458

    This guy is the master genius of video card repairs.

    • @JaceB99
      @JaceB99 Рік тому +35

      It is seriously one hell of a skill to understand the hardware to that extent, let alone having the skills and tools to repair it.

    • @jessomni9170
      @jessomni9170 Рік тому +4

      Seriously he need to make his own video card company and name to itself

  • @markothevrba
    @markothevrba Рік тому +178

    I like how he puts written instructions on screen, as if we are going to be soldering a 4090 at home.

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому +13

      ...and I'll be glad he did the day I end up having to do so... which is a day I hope never comes.

    • @RoadSparrow
      @RoadSparrow Рік тому +14

      I'm glad he does, I do this kind of repair I'm just not working on GPUs. If you know basic electronics and have done pcb work like this you can do it too.

    • @marknewellmusic
      @marknewellmusic 4 місяці тому +5

      I literally have a faulty Quadro that I plan to attempt to fix, those message on the vid are golden to those of us attempting this kind of stuff.
      I can simply rebuy a used quadro for £20-£30 but now where's the fun in that?

    • @anonony9081
      @anonony9081 4 місяці тому +8

      Is it that strange? People like Louis Rossmann have been showing how to repair electronics of equal value for a decade and he's responsible for starting many Macbook repair careers.

  • @igudeng2595
    @igudeng2595 Рік тому +243

    some of the most impressive shit i've ever seen period the amount of skill this guy displays is crazy

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Рік тому +3

      same thoguhts, that's some dedication and skill, i wont even have the patience

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому +14

      You can tell he didn't get that way without tons of practice and repetition, too - what I always find pretty interesting about watching guys do stuff like this is that I can tell how seasoned they are just by watching their handiwork / fingerwork - right down to how they apply solvents or pastes or the like. You can usually tell when someone not only has a firm grasp of something in their head, but also in motion - committed to muscle memory I suppose you could say. It definitely shows.
      I guarantee, even if I hid uncertainty, just about anyone would be able to tell if I were to make such a video - even if the info in it were 100% correct, you'd be able to tell almost instantly if I stepped in front of the camera to do the exact same procedures... that I was a rank amateur. This guy's videos actually do sort of inspire me to take this up as a hobby, using one of my old cards from builds long past.

    • @ethancbaker2002
      @ethancbaker2002 7 місяців тому

      @@VeggyZsame bro I really wish I could redo what this guy does this is pure artwork at its finest

  • @Can8ian.
    @Can8ian. Рік тому +605

    That reminds me of the story of Grace Hopper who was a pioneer in computer programming. She is often credited for coining the term "bug" to describe a flaw in computer hardware or software. While working with a team at Harvard in 1947, Hopper and her team were confused about consistent errors on a computing machine they had designed. After looking at the hardware, they discovered a moth had gotten inside and disrupted some electronic circuits. After this incident, the term "bug" was used to describe unexpected errors. This repair was a similar "bug".

    • @peterlarkin762
      @peterlarkin762 Рік тому +3

      brilliant! I hope that's true.

    • @EliSpizzichino
      @EliSpizzichino Рік тому +56

      Her name was Grass Hopper

    • @stevejones4618
      @stevejones4618 Рік тому +5

      And of course the name of one of Nvidias GPU architectures.

    • @鬼塚アレクセイ
      @鬼塚アレクセイ Рік тому +15

      disrupted not some electronic circuits, but punch cards, used at that moment. So the bug was physical xD

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Рік тому +3

      OMG same 😂 from 1947 to present and still

  • @Delimon007
    @Delimon007 Рік тому +130

    The fact that there was an actual dead bug blocking the pins is insane! Good work!

    • @RFC3514
      @RFC3514 11 місяців тому +5

      It was probably shorting them. Fried bug = mostly carbon = somewhat conductive.

    • @bhluschrean
      @bhluschrean 5 місяців тому +1

      de-bug

  • @MarcoPoloTraveler
    @MarcoPoloTraveler Рік тому +255

    You should have sent a bug report to Nvidia hotline 😂

    • @bhluschrean
      @bhluschrean 5 місяців тому +4

      lol "I found a bug in your graphics card😂😂😂"

    • @DonkeyHotey-l2e
      @DonkeyHotey-l2e 3 місяці тому +4

      NVIDIA: That was a user bug.

  • @mikemines2931
    @mikemines2931 Рік тому +69

    At 76 years this is one repair I won't be attempting. Thank you most interesting.

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому +8

      Don't feel bad, at age 38 I probably won't be either.... unless I start Dr. Frankensteining with one of my old dead (or non-dead but dated) cards...
      I'm pretty sure I would end up causing more issues than it began with. I Honestly walk away from most of this man's videos thinking of getting into repair...

  • @I_SuperHiro_I
    @I_SuperHiro_I Рік тому +306

    I still can’t get over how tiny the PCB actually is.

    • @squirrelsinjacket1804
      @squirrelsinjacket1804 Рік тому +40

      Yup the technology is impressive really once you strip away the giant cooler needed for it.

    • @bidyo1365
      @bidyo1365 Рік тому

      oh yeaaaa 🙆‍♂️

    • @zalatos
      @zalatos Рік тому +29

      yeah, its so small. all these new cards getting bigger over the years felt like "newer tech, higher power, better, faster!" but it wasnt related to the new tech at all just the heat it produces xD
      surprising

    • @samson7294
      @samson7294 Рік тому +2

      ikr!! all the gaming/productivity power in such a small card blows my mind.

    • @1SaG
      @1SaG Рік тому +3

      I keep thinking the same thing every time I watch these videos of current gen GPUs getting taken apart. These cards aren't much bigger than what we used to have, say, 20 years ago. 2023's gigantic coolers vs tiny, passive heatsinks and/or itsy-bitsy fans aside: I guess the manufacturing process is so much more advanced these days (5 nm currently IIRC?), so they don't need to use a massive PCB. I wonder how large the card would need to be if that 4090 still used the 130 nm process that the Radeon 9800 used that he repaired a few videos ago. 130 / 5 = 26, so... 26 times as large? But that's probably not how that works... :D If it is: That would probably mean a graphics card at least the size of the old Defender arcade board I used to have hanging on the office-wall. And that thing was the size of a small- to medium-size poster. :D

  • @Numfuddle
    @Numfuddle Рік тому +327

    That’s a weird fault. The bug couldn’t possibly have crawled under the core after it was soldered so it must have gotten trapped under the core during the original reflow soldering step at factory.
    If this were the case though I’d have expected the card to fail the end of line function test at factory because it would have immediately shorted something or even prevented some of the solder balls from soldering correctly.
    That defect should have been detected before the card ever shipped to retail

    • @larkan511
      @larkan511 Рік тому +25

      Sounds to me like this might've been staged then. To get clicks and such. I would also think that soldering at those temps would melt a bug entirely but it looked almost fully intact.

    • @MadmanLink
      @MadmanLink Рік тому +29

      That's assuming they test more then it powers up.

    • @lolcat
      @lolcat Рік тому +47

      ​@@larkan511i highly doubt they would risk the hit to credibility

    • @teriyakipuppy
      @teriyakipuppy Рік тому +55

      ​@@larkan511the effort of reballing isn't worth it for this many views?

    • @narfsc2657
      @narfsc2657 Рік тому +37

      it could absolutely have crawled under the core after it was soldered. There is quite a gap. Everyone that ever had a GPU in their hands and cleaned it with fluids/alcohol would know.

  • @ferocius7644
    @ferocius7644 Рік тому +52

    You are the cleanest repairer i’ve ever seen. Kudos!

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Рік тому

      Ferocious,
      Is that a joke ? Where are you from ? Virgin islands ?

  • @krnldude
    @krnldude Рік тому +19

    BTW, I love the helpful notes at the top-right! Editing is top-tier!

  • @Dabaski
    @Dabaski Рік тому +33

    Thank you for the knowledgeable information. I appreciate it
    The editing is top notch

  • @BryanTheFury
    @BryanTheFury Рік тому +22

    Seeing all the extreme precise work you do.. is always amazing... damn, the patience and the precision

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Рік тому

      stupid people do wires in it, his hand too !
      damn, the patience and the precision, he does not care.......

    • @noth606
      @noth606 4 місяці тому

      Some parts of this sort of work is easier than it looks, some of it harder, the reballing and chip placement is physics doing a lot of the work for you. I think one of the neatest things is when a chip has a slight 'tick' as it centers on the solder pads perfectly on it's own though.

  • @Justanotherbeautifulday
    @Justanotherbeautifulday Рік тому +110

    This man is amazing!!! I believe he deserves a sub from everyone who watches.

    • @losmosquitos1108
      @losmosquitos1108 Рік тому +5

      Done, 👍😛

    • @tlumme
      @tlumme Рік тому +3

      subbed too :)

    • @bidyo1365
      @bidyo1365 Рік тому +3

      i just liked 👍😁

    • @DimitriosChannel
      @DimitriosChannel Рік тому +2

      Same.

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому

      Yeah, his channel is pretty amazing - I'd even call it inspiring...
      I can guarantee, it inspires anyone who has ever had a dead GPU from the factory that they couldn't return or replace, at least. I've had several over the years. I still have a GTX 1090 (or something) sitting in my closet never used because by the time I was able to test, I could no longer return it under warranty... I've often thought about sacrificing it to experience actually taking them apart and troubleshooting, checking for shorts, etc - to see if maybe I can find the problem myself, in my free time.
      This channel makes me think about that old card every time I stumble into it.

  • @aurex8937
    @aurex8937 Рік тому +204

    You could say this was a...
    ...buggy card.
    (Sorry.)

    • @aurex8937
      @aurex8937 Рік тому +2

      @@_-Montana-_ It's like they suddenly decided to outsource production somewhere they don't have great quality control and building standards. I don't know if that's actually the case, but it'd make sense.

    • @kevinbarnard3502
      @kevinbarnard3502 Рік тому

      Well, that is where the term "computer bug" comes from: an actual bug. Wasn't it a moth or something on a board way back when that was causing problems.

    • @ssokolow
      @ssokolow Рік тому

      @@kevinbarnard3502 You're thinking of when Grace Hopper found a moth squashed in a relay... however, her note was about it being the first case of an actual bug being found, indicating that "bug" was already jargon by that point.

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому

      I just want to smack you so badly right now. Is this normal? ...I am not a violent man!

    • @SaHaRaSquad
      @SaHaRaSquad 10 місяців тому

      @@kevinbarnard3502 The word bug was already used in technical contexts by Thomas Edison and others 150 years ago and comes from a Middle English word. The situation with Grace Hopper got famous because it was a literal bug causing a bug, but the term is much older.

  • @RFC3514
    @RFC3514 11 місяців тому +2

    The "lift the core" music in these videos is like boss music in games. As soon as it starts playing you know things about about to get serious.

    • @prismothalt
      @prismothalt 11 місяців тому +1

      you mean the stranger things music?

  • @Sanchuniathon384
    @Sanchuniathon384 Рік тому +19

    This happened to me when I was a kid, our printer started printing badly, streaking ink everywhere and being oddly inconsistent. Normal diagnostics failed. When I took apart the printer, a big housefly had somehow fallen into the paper feeder and got stuck in the nozzles and died.

  • @rickfuzzy
    @rickfuzzy 10 місяців тому +1

    So glad I clicked this. Honestly at each step I was like “ok guess it’s dead” and then you just went deeper…. Amazing

  • @TheBackyardChemist
    @TheBackyardChemist Рік тому +8

    AHA!
    the elusive "computer bug"

  • @hentosama
    @hentosama Рік тому +5

    I had a laptop that would not turn on with batter or charger, no lights would turn on
    opened the back panel and for some reason my eyes caught the sight of a black dot on a tiny capacitor
    it was a tiny ant with one hind leg and a front leg shorting the cap, dusted away and laptop worked!

  • @torshec8634
    @torshec8634 Рік тому +22

    It isn't a joke, it's a Halloween scare on Friday the 13th!

  • @AeschylusShepherd
    @AeschylusShepherd Рік тому +2

    I find these videos so fascinating. Thanks for publishing them. Nice to see that GPU's can be salvaged.

  • @alastor4742
    @alastor4742 Рік тому +11

    Your repairs are pure magic!

  • @new_og_
    @new_og_ Рік тому +1

    This is the best video I’ve ever seen.
    Wow
    Thanks for recording all the deep diving you went through it was amazing.
    I was awe struck , I had no idea these things were even possible.
    ❤️:)🔥

  • @firstnamelastname-oy7es
    @firstnamelastname-oy7es Рік тому +7

    If he got that card for free or cheap cause it was DOA, that guy got himself a nice bargain getting it repaired!

  • @MrPuddinJones
    @MrPuddinJones Рік тому +3

    I had a bug fly in to an empty RAM slot on my mobo- it shorted the MOBO out. Luckily letting the mobo sit overnight and the capacitors discharging fixed the issue (after removing bug and cleaning RAM slot)
    Bugs kill computers too.

  • @runfrankfurt
    @runfrankfurt Рік тому +4

    Awesome work man!
    That poor bug got fried when the card was powered up for the first time 😂.

  • @cpfb68
    @cpfb68 Рік тому +1

    Just found your channel and am amazed how easy you make these repairs look! Thank for sharing. Subscribed!

  • @Maxter1o2
    @Maxter1o2 Рік тому +3

    Love watching your repair videos it's honestly a work of art.

  • @etjulien
    @etjulien Рік тому +2

    I'm guessing this repair was not cheap. You put a lot of work into this. Thanks for the video!

  • @RFC3514
    @RFC3514 11 місяців тому +5

    First a BIOS bug that fried CPUs, now this. Nvidia really need to improve their debugging.

    • @dranzerjetli5126
      @dranzerjetli5126 10 місяців тому +1

      They make these in cheap low quality Chinese factories for pennies and charge 1000 dollars what do you expect

    • @RFC3514
      @RFC3514 10 місяців тому

      @@dranzerjetli5126 - /Whoosh

  • @imnutrak130
    @imnutrak130 Рік тому +1

    commenting to bump the algo as I really have nothing to say because if you watched the videos, they are outstanding! Thanks for your efforts to film, explain and edit those videos!

  • @sun_ada
    @sun_ada Рік тому +45

    What can I say, Mr northwestrepair ?
    If you show your videos to the engineering students, they would be 100x more motivated to do their studies.
    Awe-some.

  • @EngineeredMoments
    @EngineeredMoments 8 місяців тому +2

    Forward straight to Nvidia CEO and Quality Control Executive.

  • @krnldude
    @krnldude Рік тому +38

    Disgusting! Though I'm seriously wondering, how the bug went under there lol

    • @ninjatall15
      @ninjatall15 Рік тому +3

      never expected someone with a krnl profile to be here

    • @mr.2minutes161
      @mr.2minutes161 Рік тому +2

      you're not supposed to eat gpu you know

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Рік тому +1

      @@mr.2minutes161 however, Time magazine does say I should eat bugs. So does Bill Gates. Coincidence?

  • @VeggyZ
    @VeggyZ Рік тому +2

    Honestly, your videos make me feel inspired to do what you're doing more every time I watch one. Even as just a hobby - I mean... the problem being an ACTUAL bug? that's so silly it has to be true, haha...

  • @TheBorgey
    @TheBorgey Рік тому +6

    Wish there were more repair people like you around the world, most would've just said they couldn't find the problem.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Рік тому +1

      The Borgey
      Wish ????
      need HOPE too ?
      Why not repair it ?
      Why you don't cry PRAY her ?

    • @TheBorgey
      @TheBorgey Рік тому +3

      @@lucasrem The fk you talking about?

  •  Рік тому +2

    Wow, here I thought these were very complex or almost impossible to physically repair, and im glad you proved me wrong. This was masterful work sir you are a godsend. Keep up the amazing work. I'll keep watching your content, and you have yourself a new subscriber.

  • @andrewvirtue5048
    @andrewvirtue5048 Рік тому +11

    Can we get this video to NVidia's QC? xD

    • @northwestrepair
      @northwestrepair  Рік тому +7

      you have my blessing

    • @brianheckaman1715
      @brianheckaman1715 10 місяців тому +4

      @@northwestrepair I'd bet $ this one never left the factory to be sold at retail, but was sorted out for recycle or repair. Instead of being dismantled/recycled/repaired, it ended up in the grey market instead. It's not likely a QA issue, but a problem with the factory reject 'chain'. And yes, I bet Nvidia would be very interested to see this. Not because of the literal bug, they'll likely consider that somewhat amusing, but for how that card ended up anywhere for sale.

  • @razorblade37
    @razorblade37 Рік тому +2

    You are the real life equivalent of a wizard sitting in his tower practicing the arcane arts, but with computers. subscribed 👍

  • @digzee
    @digzee Рік тому +20

    Awesome work. Any chance to know how much a repair like this would cost?

  • @mrtoxm8
    @mrtoxm8 3 місяці тому

    Solid work boss! Love your process and showing all the steps. Impressive hopefully I wont have to hit you up when I try to boot my new build soon, I did not test my 4090 out of the box and water blocked it already "Living dangerously"

  • @PaulLemars01
    @PaulLemars01 Рік тому +40

    So the bug was shorting the GPU which then shorted the other chip? I know you don't know but that's a crazy diagnosis and hero level repair. If your client bought this card DOA he probably made out like a bandit. I hope you charged him commensurately.

    • @dusteyezz784
      @dusteyezz784 Рік тому +1

      Everybody gets charged the same, no matter the card.

    • @JohnnyManu40
      @JohnnyManu40 Рік тому +1

      @@dusteyezz784 Makes sense, since any card could come up aces or jokers.

    • @tomkroebel4936
      @tomkroebel4936 Рік тому +2

      Maybe the bug connected the chip to power which resulted in the chips (and the bugs) death...

    • @lu34lyf
      @lu34lyf Рік тому +3

      why would you charge more for something thats been gotten cheapm regardless of what they paid you as a bussiness charges a fee for your work, not based of what they paid coz they save dmoeny meaning you can make more 🤦

    • @buleini
      @buleini Рік тому

      You bet the soldering process fried it sooner @@tomkroebel4936 ;)

  • @TB-po5cj
    @TB-po5cj Рік тому

    awesome job, where do start to do this line of work .. i wanna fix circuits and solder things and repair musical equipment

  • @robdom91
    @robdom91 Рік тому +72

    Fun fact: The first bug in a computer was actually a moth that wandered into a computer and caused constant errors. Since the machine didn't stop and wasn't equipped with any of the fail safes we're used to today, technicians had to figure out the problem all by themselves. This was back in the 40s. Nothing was modular back then. When something broke, you had to take everything apart and rewire the entire machine. Computer technicians were more like car mechanics.

    • @mikemines2931
      @mikemines2931 Рік тому +4

      Both my brother in laws were time served car mechanics, when all else failed out came the real tool kit a big hammer and a wrecking bar.

    • @MrCWoodhouse
      @MrCWoodhouse Рік тому +7

      Remember-the active elements of the computer were vacuum tubes with high voltages.

    • @benoitbvg2888
      @benoitbvg2888 11 місяців тому +1

      The version of the story I heard was that it was slot-card computer, and the bug made a 0 become a 1 or vice-versa.

    • @robdom91
      @robdom91 11 місяців тому +2

      @@benoitbvg2888 I think it's the absolute nightmare of any programmer when debugging an error doesn't cause a crash! It's kinda like navigating a huge maze and after you reach the end, you discover you're not at the exit and you probably took a wrong turn somewhere.

    • @John-o3f5w
      @John-o3f5w 10 місяців тому

      there weren't computers in the forties. more like steroided out calculators

  • @EnlightMC
    @EnlightMC Рік тому +2

    Absolutely love these repair videos especially when dealing with the chip. Awesome!

  • @mimireich
    @mimireich Рік тому +2

    Can't wait another RTX 4090 saga in this channel :D

  • @vakyz5333
    @vakyz5333 Рік тому +2

    That's limited edition bug. Its part of the Product. Nice one Nvidia. Good Job!

  • @bes12000
    @bes12000 Рік тому +2

    always amazing watching your videos, looks so easy for you.

  • @OGMangler
    @OGMangler 4 місяці тому

    That was impressive. I'm curious about the repair charge. I will remember this video. If I ever need a video card repaired, I will send it to you.

  • @Cotterpin_Doozer
    @Cotterpin_Doozer Рік тому +3

    Damn can't ever imagine spending mega $ on a product with no warranty or proof or workingness.

    • @jamesg8246
      @jamesg8246 Рік тому +1

      Pretty certain the buyer didn't pay anything close to full price. Hopefully they got it, knowing it doesn't work, for little cash.

    • @squirrelsinjacket1804
      @squirrelsinjacket1804 Рік тому +3

      It's conceivable they got it for a really steep discount, then took it to this repair shop and paid like $100-$200 to get a functioning 4090. They still could have saved a ton of money versus buying a new one.

    • @jamesg8246
      @jamesg8246 Рік тому +1

      @@squirrelsinjacket1804 that's my assumption... because a known non working card is only worthy of a paperweight.

  • @teknologyguy5638
    @teknologyguy5638 Рік тому

    great that you show the on screen text indicating what is happening in the process

  • @santiagocastro6701
    @santiagocastro6701 Рік тому +6

    I expected no less from "the best technisian that has ever lived"

  • @pabelnl
    @pabelnl Рік тому +1

    Great video, I had not idea this type of repair was possible.

  • @watercannonscollaboration2281
    @watercannonscollaboration2281 Рік тому +37

    Considering the origin of a bug when referred to a computer meant a literal bug, we’ve certainly come full circle in 2023

    • @whiterose7055
      @whiterose7055 Рік тому

      Nice observation !

    • @fixitman2174
      @fixitman2174 Рік тому +1

      Yep, that computer ran on vacuum tubes, and the bug was a moth.

    • @SaHaRaSquad
      @SaHaRaSquad 10 місяців тому

      It isn't. The word bug was already used in technical contexts by Thomas Edison and others 150 years ago.

  • @WellyngtonDev
    @WellyngtonDev Рік тому +1

    Bro you are legend of repairs! You have no idea on how you help enthusiasts people like me. We can't find even with money such quality and content of GPU repairs, and you do it for free. Thanks!

  • @CocolinoFan
    @CocolinoFan Рік тому +22

    Hero of late stage capitalism.

  • @ClaudioProductionsX
    @ClaudioProductionsX Рік тому +5

    Fun fact: you recreated the actual origin of the word "bug", since the actual word came to life because a literal bug was inside one of the very first computers, causing it a malfunction.
    This "bug" was causing this 4090 to malfunction.

    • @gargolgaming8101
      @gargolgaming8101 Рік тому

      Not true. The term bug was used before the bug found in that computer, as in the famous photograph it says "First actual case of a bug being found" It's a myth that that was the first use, as it was even stated that it was not.

  • @NoName-st6zc
    @NoName-st6zc 10 місяців тому +1

    Absolutely mental. Amazing work.

  • @coldgarden_
    @coldgarden_ Рік тому +1

    Amazing work as always! Love your background music!

  • @chillinsince96
    @chillinsince96 Рік тому +1

    You are doing very important work and you are much appreciated. Truely incredible your contribution to humanity. Thank you

    • @chillinsince96
      @chillinsince96 Рік тому

      Humanity cannot continue digging these things out of the sand. We need to fix what we have that’s broken and repurpose. there are enough parts on this planet for everyone to have an upgrade for years and years and years.

  • @theanimazin
    @theanimazin Рік тому

    I keep forgetting to subscribe! Subscribed! This video was awesome! Great discovery and repair!

  • @Aldebaran80
    @Aldebaran80 Рік тому +1

    i want this guy living in my neighbourhood to stay safe about any electronic purchase i would do, knowing that he could repair them all, no matters how difficult could be the repairing... i don't know any store that makes this kind of repairings in my city and nearby...

  • @DoctorPlay
    @DoctorPlay 7 місяців тому

    Just came across this channel and I’m fascinated. Amazing videos. When he was doing repairs on the chip I played at 25% speed. Highly recommended.

  • @zopl82
    @zopl82 Рік тому +1

    Awesome videos! Could you post the raw repair time? Its hard to put it in context with these sped up videos.

  • @prunoRecipes
    @prunoRecipes Рік тому

    Great seeing a professional work. Adjusting individual solder balls with tweezers. Amazing. Pruno

  • @brawldude2656
    @brawldude2656 4 місяці тому

    Bro I didnt even think someone could fix a gpu. You are really good at this

  • @konellin189
    @konellin189 10 місяців тому

    hahaha, that bug took it personal - Bug free now...Amazing skills man.

  • @Justathought81
    @Justathought81 Рік тому

    Great work on the audio and editing this fix, always fascinating to watch.

  • @Chris6068
    @Chris6068 10 місяців тому

    God this kind of work looks satisfying. Props man, I wish I could find something like this that really makes my brain work everyday.

  • @rich4513
    @rich4513 Рік тому

    Very cool vids enjoy watching ... But how is the repair not more costly than the video card ? How much do you charge on avg ?

  • @theshortcut101
    @theshortcut101 Рік тому +1

    definitly need to put 4090 in the title please :) thank you! Great video, excellent skills

  • @GoDoWaR1337
    @GoDoWaR1337 11 місяців тому

    I've watched a LOT of repair videos and this might be the most impressive one yet. Great work!

  • @R3TR0J4N
    @R3TR0J4N Рік тому

    dude the thumbnail change is such a smart move 👏i saw it and click fast, to my surprize ive already watched it 😅

  • @user-pwfus
    @user-pwfus Рік тому

    Love watching the fast forward vid of you cleaning the solder on CPU chip while blazing a nice kush ;) keep up the hard work.

  • @AmatsuDarkfyre
    @AmatsuDarkfyre 14 днів тому

    You sir are a wizard beyond measure. I can't even comprehend your knowledge.

  • @hostile1ne
    @hostile1ne Рік тому

    As always, very thorough and detailed with cautionary captions to inform viewers..

  • @Leppo7
    @Leppo7 Рік тому

    Wattching you clean it was amazing, verey good job getting it working again! Magician

  • @JeremyArchie
    @JeremyArchie 9 місяців тому

    Wow...it's amazing this made it past factory QC, testing, and into customer hands without issue.
    It's a good thing the customer lives somewhere that makes it (kinda) easy to send the card to someone like you that can actually fix it.
    Those of us that live overseas might just be better off buying a new card because of how prohibitive the cost is to ship something like
    this back and forth across international boundaries.

  • @Arek_R.
    @Arek_R. 10 місяців тому +2

    So a bug made it's way under the core, shorted some balls some of which were responsible for clock, and also blew up that comparator IC?

  • @Platinumdose420
    @Platinumdose420 5 місяців тому

    wow, i really enjoyed this video , lots of information as you go along fixing it, great quality over all amazing video and well videos!

  • @hanovergreen4091
    @hanovergreen4091 Рік тому

    The "bug" word comes from a bug shorting out a vacuum tube connection. Nothing changes :). Thanks for the video and subscribed. Best Regards and Best Wishes!

  • @gren1977
    @gren1977 Рік тому

    ahh, that infamous video, rarely mentioned as the source. I hope whoever sends their stuff to you for repair never haggles -- this level of skill should be compensated the way we compensate gifted artists: generously

  • @DaveHaze
    @DaveHaze Рік тому +1

    My man you are a handy genious! Good work all the props for the video and the process of fixing the card!

    • @northwestrepair
      @northwestrepair  Рік тому +1

      Thanks.

    • @Krawna
      @Krawna 10 місяців тому

      ​@@northwestrepairwhat is the synthwave track in the middle of the video when you find the bug

  • @Spectru91
    @Spectru91 Рік тому +1

    awesome channel ✌️✌️✌️ you are truly skilled

  • @Ligh7Bulb
    @Ligh7Bulb Рік тому

    This is like the funny yet serious version of Northridge Fix. love this content bro 🤣

  • @nothingbutcalmingandrelaxi1040

    There is a lot of things I see on UA-cam and think to myself "I could do that!", this Sir is not one of those videos. Damn that was impressive.

  • @Riprazor
    @Riprazor Рік тому

    impressive! saving this so I know who to contact when I have a problem!

  • @dexterman6361
    @dexterman6361 Рік тому +2

    Wow, this was so calming to watch. :)

  • @camilorodriguez8540
    @camilorodriguez8540 Рік тому

    My guy you are a god 4 repairing this. Awesome video

  • @MrVlodato
    @MrVlodato Рік тому

    I actually run into bugs inside of consoles for repair all the time. One time a roach litterally fried itself by shorting its body across two components inside the power supply which made the power supply fail.

  • @a5hes
    @a5hes Рік тому

    Pretty satisfying to watch! Good job man keep it up.

  • @NVidiero
    @NVidiero Рік тому

    What a nice work. And the music fits perfectly

  • @yassersaeed2010
    @yassersaeed2010 Рік тому +1

    WOW! You did an amazing job! As an electronics engineering myself, I would never bother doing even 5% of what you did .. but was it worth it cost and headache wise?

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Рік тому

      Yasser
      We just replace the ven, he broke it, cables in it, his hand too ....
      Too fancy, repair it ????

  • @DimitriosChannel
    @DimitriosChannel Рік тому

    Wow you just got a new sub. What a great vid you made! What kind of schooling did you go through?

  • @dieaking6475
    @dieaking6475 10 місяців тому

    You better get paid good cuz this work is insane bro. Looks incredible