NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 40 GPUs are being repurposed in a range of ways with some repurposing mobility dies for desktops & others simply scamming people online.
Third-party changes made in GPUs are a common tactic adopted by modders or sometimes scammers in the markets to either experiment with something new or leverage an ordinary consumer by selling counterfeit products to them. We recently reported scammers advertising GeForce RTX 4090s at low prices and unsurprisingly, the GPUs turned out empty from the inside. Similarly, a new sort of "scam" has been discovered by the experts from North West Repair, where an Amazon-bought GPU turned out to be a counterfeit one, that too with a fried PCB & an entirely different chip.
North West Repair received an ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX 4090 from a consumer, who disclosed that the graphics card had a minor fault, at least what he was told. When the experts dissected the GPU, they found out that the onboard GPU was a replaced one, and had the AD103-300-A1 marked on it, which is used in the GeForce RTX 4080.
Not only this, but it seems like the seller did some experiments with the GPU itself, which is why it was "weirdly" assembled, with melted power connectors and a cracked PCB as well. What came as a "minor fix" to North West Repair turned out to be something much different, & rather an unusual case, especially considering that it was bought from a US marketplace.
Not all GPU modding incidents are ill-intentioned, but in another case, a Chinese firm has reportedly designed desktop cards, that feature repurposed NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 mobility GPUs onboard, along with a design that is completely an unofficial one, and interesting at the same time. While there isn't any reason to
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