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 Reviving graphic cards in the oven, I like it smokin' hot

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TSCompelica
post Dec 9 2009, 11:37 AM, updated 16y ago

dozing off. zzz.
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You'd probably seen this somewhere else, and this isn't mine. Full credit goes to antipesto93 from OCForums, and Haste266 for the brilliant how-to.

I had a dying 7800GT on my hands, whenever it ran 3D games it started to chug and eventually BSOD. A week later, the card started having artifacts even on Windows, and a day after that it wouldn't even boot. So I heard of a crazy method where you literally place your graphic card in an oven, let 'em bake and plug it back in. This was obviously met with furore, and no one thought it would actually work. Nothing to lose, I popped it into my mom's baker.

It now works. Hard to believe, but it works.

Apparently the methodology is similar on how it is usually done at factories - the card is heated up to allow the solder contacting with the ICs on the board to melt and reform the bond that was weak in the first place (which might be the cause of artifacts/problems). A short time is only required, with a maximum of 8 minutes, and at a temperature of 200C.

So what do you need, and how is it done?

You'll need an oven capable of going up to 200C. Microwave ovens don't count. Some aluminium foil, a cookie tray, and thermal goop of your choice as well too.

First thing to do is to strip all bolts, nuts, screws, whatever fasteners you can find off the board. This includes heatsinks. Stickers may remain. Strip them off till you're left with the bare PCB. Be sure to remove all thermal tape (you might want to keep that for the after-baking session) and thermal grease. Cut up some aluminium foil about the size of your card, and place it on the tray. Then, ball up some of the remaining foil to use them as stands, as you don't want the card to get in contact with the foil below it. Be sure that stands are positioned at a connector/PCB, and the card should be facing down. DO NOT place any stands on any ICs/capacitors, most of them are probably surface mounted and would probably shift from its position during the cookoff, screwing your chance of revival even further.

user posted image
The card, all cleaned and gutted

user posted image
The oven awaits!

Finally when it's ready, preheat your oven to 200C. If your oven is fan assisted, switch it off. Once hot, put it into the fiery pits of hell oven and watch it burn for a good 8 minutes. Some even did it for 10. Just don't overdo it, and let the heat soak.

user posted image
I did this at 8AM in the morning. Luv the smell of flux and heavy metals in the mornin'.

user posted image
Xtra Crispy

After the toast, carefully remove the tray and place it to cool. If you can smell flux (the same smell in your Kemahiran Hidup cheapo projects), you're probably good to go. Air the place as well, you don't want to breathe in the bad stuff do we? Once cool, reapply the thermal tape and paste, reassemble back the card, plug it back in, say a little prayer (if you're an atheist, grab a beer. If you can't drink Ribena would do) then turn it on.

Hope it works for you. Mine did.
PootieTang_85
post Dec 9 2009, 12:35 PM

LOL
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that's coollll shocking.gif
hr_elie
post Dec 9 2009, 12:51 PM

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1 question..
dont the caps get too hot in the oven..

because some caps do have temperature tolerance right..

afraid the caps will blow out.
myee
post Dec 9 2009, 01:07 PM

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1 question...microwave can use instead of oven?
kevin613
post Dec 9 2009, 01:11 PM

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QUOTE(myee @ Dec 9 2009, 01:07 PM)
1 question...microwave can use instead of oven?
*
metal stuffs in microwave oven is a big nono if i remember correctly..
Terence573
post Dec 9 2009, 01:35 PM

wow!!!!!
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I had a rosak ti4200...boot up with artifacts all over the screen.

but no oven.

yeah how can the caps survive 200C of heat?

On the other hand,careful of residue of gpu left in oven? u dont want 7800 muffin to go into ur throat haha.

This post has been edited by Terence573: Dec 9 2009, 01:38 PM
SUSd3l4croix
post Dec 9 2009, 01:41 PM

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video connector made of plastic if im not mistake. not melt?
ne0bolimi3rd
post Dec 9 2009, 01:45 PM

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QUOTE(myee @ Dec 9 2009, 01:07 PM)
1 question...microwave can use instead of oven?
*
do u know how the microwave work?
any partical that absorb the energy will generate the heat..
and metal only reflect those wave..
thats y metal is big no no in the microwave oven..
unless u got convection/grill+microwave oven 2/3 in 1 icon_rolleyes.gif
Hiwatari
post Dec 9 2009, 01:46 PM

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mayb can only b applied to the graphic card w/ solid caps only
btw, the aim is to melt the solder n reform the bond
IINM what ever temp that melt the solder will melt the plastic part s well
kev da man
post Dec 9 2009, 01:47 PM

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QUOTE(d3l4croix @ Dec 9 2009, 01:41 PM)
video connector made of plastic if im not mistake. not melt?
*
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_hot_does_a_b...ghter_flame_get

i accidentally burned a DVI connector once with a cricket. it survived without even melting, so there you go.
nkarul85
post Dec 9 2009, 02:05 PM

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i heard 3 case this year, all is successful,

but never heard/see failed case..

raymond5105
post Dec 9 2009, 02:29 PM

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It a good info sharing here,problem GC can be revived with just a 10mins in an oven.
monsh
post Dec 9 2009, 03:48 PM

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omg i've lost my old GC , shouldnt have throw them away .
Terence573
post Dec 9 2009, 04:13 PM

wow!!!!!
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I think the plastic stuff was put on after the heating process in the factory?

but someone had done it with success story.too bad I dun have an oven...
g933299
post Dec 9 2009, 04:16 PM

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Interesting... any prerequisites to the GC? Must it have certain type of cap/chips, or a certain layout? Soudns too good to be true tongue.gif
Terence573
post Dec 9 2009, 04:18 PM

wow!!!!!
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Maybe a screenshot of pc running the after processed gpu?
TSCompelica
post Dec 9 2009, 04:24 PM

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QUOTE(hr_elie @ Dec 9 2009, 12:51 PM)
1 question..
dont the caps get too hot in the oven..

because some caps do have temperature tolerance right..

afraid the caps will blow out.
*
QUOTE(Terence573 @ Dec 9 2009, 01:35 PM)
I had a rosak ti4200...boot up with artifacts all over the screen.

but no oven.

yeah how can the caps survive 200C of heat?

On the other hand,careful of residue of gpu left in oven? u dont want 7800 muffin to go into ur throat haha.
*
Solid type caps should be able to last the cookout better than the standard aluminium ones. Some even went to the extent of wrapping those caps with extra foil to protect them, but for me as long you aren't leaving the card there for a very long time it should be fine. So far, no reports of exploding caps to my knowledge.

Why bother about the caps if the card is dead to begin with?

About the residue, yeah there might be a health risk in that, I don't want flux on my choco cake either, it'll make it taste funny. Most stuff are RoHS compliant by now, but I wiped the oven interior just to make sure.

QUOTE(d3l4croix @ Dec 9 2009, 01:41 PM)
video connector made of plastic if im not mistake. not melt?
*
QUOTE(Hiwatari @ Dec 9 2009, 01:46 PM)
mayb can only b applied to the graphic card w/ solid caps only
btw, the aim is to melt the solder n reform the bond
IINM what ever temp that melt the solder will melt the plastic part s well
*
I was skeptical of that too, but nothing got warped/melted at all. Probably the quality is much better than the average plastic bag lol.

7800GT so far passed 5 hours of FurMark, damn now I know why people want your faulty GCs...

This post has been edited by colinwong89: Dec 9 2009, 04:32 PM
tuonn
post Dec 9 2009, 04:48 PM

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wow...cool method dude... thumbup.gif
shawnlut
post Dec 9 2009, 04:52 PM

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Great... rclxms.gif
I shouldn't throw away my dead old GC... doh.gif
unitron
post Dec 9 2009, 05:13 PM

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this method only work if the problem with your GC is with bad IC connections.... if the problem is IC related, then heat will make it worst.

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