NotebookForums.com › Forums › Notebook Manufacturers › Alienware Notebook Forums › Alienware Area-51 and Aurora Notebooks › nVidia 8700/8800/9600/9800 chips are failing across the board
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

nVidia 8700/8800/9600/9800 chips are failing across the board

post #1 of 92
Thread Starter 
Nvidia G92s and G94 reportedly failing

Desktop boards this time

By Charlie Demerjian: Tuesday, 12 August 2008, 9:35 AM

NVIDIA IS IN DEEP trouble over the defective parts problem, and from what we're being told, this is only the tip of the iceberg. NV still insists on stonewalling and spinning because the cost of owning up to the problem could very well sink the company.
If you haven't been following the story, the short version, up till now, is that all G84 and G86 chips are bad. Nvidia is blaming everyone under the sun, but denying they have any hand in the failures. While this may sound plausible, technical analyses by people intimately involved in the requisite semiconductor technologies tell The INQ that it is a bunch of bull: NV simply screwed up. Badly. If it was a problem with the suppliers, NV would not be paying out more than the chip cost, much less gagging OEMs: it would simply be passed along.
In any case, the official story is that there was a small batch of parts given only to HP that went bad. That was comprehensively proved wrong when Dell, Apple, Asus, Lenovo and everyone else under the sun also had problems. NV AR recalled the parts and recanted the story about it only being an EOL test run. Bad fibbers, no cookie. They still stuck to the story about it being only laptop parts, and that it was under control.
If you think it is under control now, the following is part of an email sent Monday by a very tech-savvy reader. "We just got our first casualty from the Nvidia mobile graphics [expletive deleted]. Laptop used by one of our senior engineers started acting up this past weekend. Won't boot except in SAFE mode. Called Dell, they tried a few things, gave up, stated it was the graphics module, and said that because they were SO swamped dealing with that issue, they were just going to send a completely new laptop!"
There are two messages here which have echoes in earlier emails received over the past few weeks. First is that Dell is replacing full laptops over this, contrary to what they claim (read the comments here and here for more). The second is that the small 'under control' problem is far from that. If they had a handle on it, they would not be so far behind and drowning in backorders. Anyone want to bet Dell isn't going to get stuck with the bill here?
To make matters more laughable, the fix that NV is forcing on Dell, HP and everyone else does not fix the problem, it simply makes it less likely to occur during the warranty period. With HP now offering an extended warranty period, and Dell looking likely to do the same, this will only multiply the cost. Add in the fact that Nvidia is sending out defective parts as replacements (there are no good ones), and you have a recipe for a long and expensive tale.
That is where we stand now - NV is simply stonewalling everyone and the costs are adding up. How adult of them. The question of why still remains though, and with another little tidbit of information, it becomes quite clear. There was a digitimes article on July 25, here if you are a subscriber, that said: "Due to Nvidia not clearly explaining the details of the faults reported in its notebook GPUs, some channel vendors have demanded graphics card makers issue a recall for desktop-based discrete graphics cards using the same GPU core, according to sources at graphics card makers."
Reading that, it sounds a mite odd: why would Nvidia keep the partners in the dark like that? They have to be told what the real story is for business reasons, right? When you see stories like these, it is very likely that they are not what they seem, and that the story is simply a nice face-saving Asian 'hello' applied with a backhand.
A little digging revealed what this, and more, is all about, and it's far uglier than just the 'notebook' version. It seems that four board partners are seeing G92 and G94 chips going bad in the field at high rates. If you know what failures look like statistically, they follow a Poisson distribution, aka a bell curve. The failures start out small, and ramp up quickly - very quickly. If you know what you are looking for, you can catch the signs early on. From the sound of the backchannel grumblings, the failures have been flagged already, and NV isn't playing nice with their partners.
Why wouldn't they? Well, the G92 chip is used in the 8800GT, 8800GTS, 8800GS, several mobile flavours of 8800, most of the 9800 suffixes, and a few 9600 variants just to confuse buyers. The G94 is basically only the 9600GT. Basically we are told all G92 and G94 variants are susceptible to the same problem - basically they are all defective. Any guesses as to how much this is going to cost?
From the look of it, all G8x variants other than the G80, and all G9x variants are defective, but we have only been able to get people to comment directly on the G84, G86, G92 and G94, and all variants thereof. Since Nvidia is not acknowledging the obvious G84 and G86 problems, don't look for much word on this new set either - if they can bury it, it will drop their costs.
In the end, what it comes down to is that the problem is far bigger than they are admitting, and crosses generational lines, process lines, and OEM lines. Nvidia is quick to point the finger at everyone but themselves, but after a while, the facts strain those cover stories well past breaking point. There is a common engineering failure here - this problem is far too widespread for it to be anything else. The stonewalling, denials and partner gagging is simply a last-ditch attempt at wallet covering.
With OEMs extending warranties, Nvidia is going to have to cover a lot of laptops for a long time. Desktop boards are going bad as well now, contrary to the statements of Nvidia PR and AR, and the hole keeps getting deeper and deeper. I wonder if they can ever come clean and survive.
post #2 of 92
I'm neither an ATI fanboy nor a Nvidia fanboy, so when I say that I think that this article is a little on the sensational side I'm not being biased. I will also say that the XPS m1530 that I bought for my wife has a Nvidia 8600GT(256mb) gpu and it has performed flawlessly.Could it be because I purchased the laptop way before all of the troubles were being reported? Who knows for sure, but all I can say is that one should not start the "sky is falling" alarm just yet...
post #3 of 92
INQ(where this post is from) and Endgadget both got flamed for this report. And please note that the initial report for this came out near the end of June. Nvidia admitted that there was an issue with the "packing" and nothing more.

So in retrospect if you believe Nvidia did nothing to correct this, then what does that leave you with? AMD/ATI are no better with their problems. .

One last comment the cards they announced that had the problems were the 8xxx series which were coming off the last batch of an end of market production. And as deserved when the author called them about it they laughed right in his face.
post #4 of 92
if all there new cards are failing then there stock wouldnt have gone up 10% in the last two days... no one would touch the stock if they were in that bad of shape...
post #5 of 92
So far, my 8800gtx is running flawlessly, overclocked to 650/1450/2000. I'm using an aftermarket cooler, thermalright, and it runs below 60 degrees.

My 7900gs cards in my m9700 have also performed flawlessly for a couple years.

I'd think if all the chips were bad, I'd have problems with one of these systems, we'll have to wait and see.

As for the inquirer, pffft...
post #6 of 92
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by littlefrankus View Post
if all there new cards are failing then there stock wouldnt have gone up 10% in the last two days... no one would touch the stock if they were in that bad of shape...
Gone up? The stocks have been plummeting like a rock....


LL
post #7 of 92
it was plummeting before the problem arised... this is due to the economic conditions just like dell and intel they all went down... after the conference call giving the news about the chips it rose 10%...I have done much research on nvidia and intel and AMD I trade stocks for a living and invest heavily...when a stock can deliver bad news to share holders and the stock rises 10% then that is a good sign the bottom has hit in the stock and its a good time to buy...
post #8 of 92
Thread Starter 
Down -0.31% on Friday. I have stocks and funds, and that is not a 10% increase of the stocks value in the last two trading days
Down from $18 a share to $12.96 in less than 30 days is very, very bad. The shares were at $40 just nine months ago.
post #9 of 92
I'm going to interject here: Play Nice Kids...
post #10 of 92
the stock was at 11.00 then it up too 12.98... that would be a 10% increase...that is tuesday thru friday which are part of the trading days... the .31% percent was on friday stock were mixed with oil going up and down... look at wednesday and thursday...
LL
post #11 of 92
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by littlefrankus View Post
the stock was at 11.00 then it up too 12.98... that would be a 10% increase...that is tuesday thru friday which are part of the trading days... the .31% percent was on friday stock were mixed with oil going up and down... look at wednesday and thursday...
Ok. But I like to look at the bigger picture. You say look at wednesday and thursday that the stocks value increased 10%, but if you look back 3 weeks the stocks value has dropped 35%
post #12 of 92
yes it did...when people get scared they dump and run.. hedge funds do it alot... thats how they short a stock and then buy at a lower price... hence the conference call then the jump up...typical people who know nothing and get scared...Mcdonalds not too long ago gave somewhat bad news about sales and the stocks went down almost 6 dollars a share people got scared... great buying time since the stock went from 45 to what it is now...
post #13 of 92
Hey Rive, I would be very very worried about AMD/ATI instead of Nvidia. They have their problems as well.

Both are attractive targets for a buy outs. Its only a matter of time.
post #14 of 92
yeah a buy indeed could happen it would be a good time for intel to swallow up nvidia or AMD to increase their position in the GPU market...
post #15 of 92
Quote:
Originally Posted by littlefrankus View Post
I trade stocks for a living and invest heavily...when a stock can deliver bad news to share holders and the stock rises 10% then that is a good sign the bottom has hit in the stock and its a good time to buy...
While this may be true, any trader knows fortunes can be won and lost by day trading, but in general stock performance is better judged by trending, as the graphic depicts, NV is heavily tanking, I wouldnt even consider it rebounded till it gets north of 25 or 30 and its ALONG way off from there.

There is no noubt NV is in trouble, and if these reports of widespread defective gpu's hold more than than an ounce of water, NV is looking at even further lows! Can neone say NV luvs Intel!
post #16 of 92
IBM (rumored) may buy AMD/ATI and Intel (rumored) may buy Nvidia. But until they become fact we are still stuck with the two and all that goes with it.
post #17 of 92
Quote:
Originally Posted by SoloMan View Post
IBM (rumored) may buy AMD/Intel, and Intel (rumored) may buy Nvidia. But until they become fact we are still stuck with the two and all that goes with it.
Very helpful to remember. Just like additional Nvidia cards (rumored) may have problems. This story is still only being done by one source- the Inquirer- and it hasn't been confirmed yet. Unless it's confirmed, I wouldn't worry about video cards that weren't on the original list of bad units.
post #18 of 92
I have purchased four laptops in the last year, three of them with 8400's for friends and mine with an 8600 and all have behaved well so far. This also applies to the 8600GT on my desktop.

I have seen the reports but since too much speculation has been tossed all around I'm just waiting until everything clears up.

(and for the record, I have owned ATI cards before as well)
post #19 of 92
Pretty resounding evidence this is not just an Inq [only] story!!!

Damn thats alot of affected laptops.... and hrrrrmmmm AW owned by Dell, but no AW cards affected, that math just doesnt add up to me.....

Really makes me wonder just how little substance and how much marketing B.S. their "Industry leading system testing before it leaves the factory" line really is if in all their testing they didnt see the problem that is SO prevelant that Dell is offering an extra year warranty on (just about?) every laptop they sold(w/ nv card) for this exact problem.
post #20 of 92
even though dell owns alienware doesnt mean they have the same vendors... havent heard of any failing yet...
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
NotebookForums.com › Forums › Notebook Manufacturers › Alienware Notebook Forums › Alienware Area-51 and Aurora Notebooks › nVidia 8700/8800/9600/9800 chips are failing across the board