Warning Signs When Buying Used GPUs: How to Detect Defective Video Cards

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • We're going over the most common defects with used GPUs, hopefully providing a roadmap for how to look for warning signs when buying a used card locally or online. Comment w/ your own!
    Sponsor: Get 10% off Squarespace purchases (geni.us/BqEpf)
    This video is following-up our guide on preventative maintenance, dusting, cleaning, & re-pasting video cards: • GPU Cleaning Before & ...
    We know a lot of people are eying both the second-hand and new markets right now, hoping to land whatever is available and sensible for the rest of the build. Because of this, we've had an influx of viewer emails about eBay scams and broken GPUs sold "used" to unsuspecting buyers. You should always pre-test a card before paying if buying physically in the same area as the seller, or if you're buyer protected, test it immediately on receipt from an online seller. In that process, you can use this video to help identify some of the most common used GPU failures. Those often include clock locks, overheating / dust build-up, dead fans, broken fans, physical card damage (like missing capacitors from a bad disassembly), bad GPU sag, and the like. Many of these are resolvable or, worst case, identifiable so that you can return the card or pass on the purchase. There are many more -- please sound-off with your experiences in the comments!
    The best way to support our work is through our store: store.gamersnexus.net/
    Like our content? Please consider becoming our Patron to support us: / gamersnexus
    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 - Getting Ripped Off
    01:25 - Things to Look For in a Used GPU (Quick List)
    03:09 - Human Factors & Judging Character
    04:42 - Our Defect Pile
    06:00 - Frequency Stuck Way Below Boost
    07:00 - How to Validate Basics with Software & GPU-Z
    11:10 - How GPU Artifacting & Bad Memory Can Look
    13:23 - Identifying GPU Sag & Fixing GPU Sag
    14:21 - Broken Fans, Capacitors, Warped PCBs, & Physical Problems
    18:28 - Additional Thoughts & Warnings
    ** Please like, comment, and subscribe for more! **
    Links to Amazon and Newegg are typically monetized on our channel (affiliate links) and may return a commission of sales to us from the retailer. This is unrelated to the product manufacturer. Any advertisements or sponsorships are disclosed within the video ("this video is brought to you by") and above the fold in the description. We do not ever produce paid content or "sponsored content" (meaning that the content is our idea and is not funded externally aside from whatever ad placement is in the beginning) and we do not ever charge manufacturers for coverage.
    Follow us in these locations for more gaming and hardware updates:
    t: / gamersnexus
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    Host, Writing: Steve Burke
    Video: Andrew Coleman, Keegan Gallick
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Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +303

    We'd love to hear more about our community's experiences with either buying used PC hardware components (GPUs, CPUs, etc.) or helping friends fix their own. There are probably a lot more shared experiences that can help other viewers of the comments section learn and protect themselves from bad purchases. Post them below!
    This video is following-up our guide on preventative maintenance, dusting, cleaning, & re-pasting video cards: czcams.com/video/n7NMeu0QiYk/video.html
    Grab a GN Toolkit, Mouse Mat, shirt, or GPU anatomy poster here: store.gamersnexus.net/

    • @elmoi1795
      @elmoi1795 Před 3 lety +2

      rx 570 moment

    • @whyeven3722
      @whyeven3722 Před 3 lety +3

      I've had nothing but peaches when buying used GPUs. Bought a used Dell OEM RX 570, and it came coated in a thin layer of dust, but working. Probably used to mine, but it worked fine for the time I had it.
      Current GPU is a used 980 Ti I got used for $200. It was super clean, in the box, and looked like new. 10/10 would buy used GPU again.

    • @georgem.6136
      @georgem.6136 Před 3 lety +4

      I asked last live stream about you suggesting someone for GPU repair, my issue was I bought a brand new, unopened box card outside the US, The manufacture told me when I immediately reached out there is different warranty regulations depending on what country I live in vs where the card was purchased & to contact the company I purchased from, & literally never to respond to another message from me

    • @georgem.6136
      @georgem.6136 Před 3 lety +1

      The card caused a D6 post code

    • @toysareforboys1
      @toysareforboys1 Před 3 lety +2

      I bought a used 1080ti, guy showed me running the heaven benchmark no issues. Tried it in two different computers, can't run any games (crashes to desktop) and can't play 4k movies full screen (black screen, sound continues fine, have to reboot to get video back. BUT, it can play 4k movies in a window (even a full screen window) and I can use it for encoding videos no issues.

  • @jonathan8087
    @jonathan8087 Před 3 lety +1609

    2020: NVIDIA/AMD New GPU Press Conference
    2021: Used GPU Buyer's Guide

  • @NP907AK
    @NP907AK Před 3 lety +2788

    "Looks like Linus handled it" 10/10

  • @3Runner95
    @3Runner95 Před 3 lety +1851

    Sign number 1: guy is selling like 8 of them and claims they have only been used for gaming

    • @zwerker
      @zwerker Před 3 lety +209

      I had the opposite experience. Sold a GTX 1060 (Asus dual, the white one) earlier this year. After paying for the card the buyer said that he now has eight of them, uses them for mining Ethereum. Never crossed my mind, still kicking myself for not asking.

    • @alreed2434
      @alreed2434 Před 3 lety +178

      @@zwerker Probably would have lied to you anyway...

    • @PifchoBG
      @PifchoBG Před 3 lety +54

      if u are a miner just sell them one by one dont say u have 8 of them. :D

    • @Amusia727
      @Amusia727 Před 3 lety +14

      I bought a 3080 and 3070 at MSRP, saw how much the 3080 was selling for and listed it on eBay. Turns out the buyer was building mining rigs out of them and selling them for even worse prices than scalpers. Currently using my 3070 for mining since I'm too busy to game on it (replacing my Vega 64 which was having issues with new AMD drivers anyway and sold it for as much as I originally paid).

    • @sandordugalin8951
      @sandordugalin8951 Před 3 lety +118

      Oh no! He wants to sell me a card that's been running undervolted and hasn't been subjected to expansion and contraction pressures from intermittent uses? Terrible!

  • @ek8507
    @ek8507 Před 3 lety +83

    "its all social stuff. hopefully youve got some skills there."
    thats asking a fair amount from a tech enthusiast audience (^:

  • @UndeadFleshgod
    @UndeadFleshgod Před 3 lety +1366

    What to look for when buying new GPUs: A miracle

    • @josephl6727
      @josephl6727 Před 3 lety +34

      Yeah, it's hard to trust alot of people out there. I got lucky with a lightly used rtx 2070 super from a software engineer. He showed me that it worked and also showed me benchmarks.

    • @afrog2666
      @afrog2666 Před 3 lety +8

      @@josephl6727 Well he said "NEW GPU`s".. It`s mostly there you need a miracle, and the used market you need trust, or just, take some precautions..

    • @priestofsyrinx6681
      @priestofsyrinx6681 Před 3 lety +31

      New GPUs: A miracle
      Used GPUs: A deep pocket

    • @shrimpfry880
      @shrimpfry880 Před 3 lety +4

      @@afrog2666 the used market is disgustingly expensive tho

    • @Morpheus-pt3wq
      @Morpheus-pt3wq Před 3 lety +1

      Except having luck while refreshing e-shop websites? Money of course.

  • @LastSecBloomer
    @LastSecBloomer Před 3 lety +340

    I got my 1080Ti from someone who was mining and it was in good shape, aside from high temps. I stripped the cooler and found out the thermal paste was dried up. I repasted it and it brough down teperatures by nearly 20 degrees...working like a charm for over a year now.

    • @fleurdewin7958
      @fleurdewin7958 Před 3 lety +9

      @Romi Not Pascal cards are running hot. It depends on what TDP the card has and how good the cooler is. Low-end cards with very low TDP but with crap coolers also can run hot. Example: GTX 1080 cards have TDP range between 180W to 300W . Of course the 300W TDP will run alot hotter.

    • @PifchoBG
      @PifchoBG Před 3 lety +2

      the same thing with my new /old/ 1080. i paid 300$, high temps, after repasting and repading and now its super cool

    • @ericmann1781
      @ericmann1781 Před 3 lety

      @Romi Looking to do the same with mine even though I've only had it for just over 4 years. I did remove the backplate and shove heatsinks on the back of the memory and VRM and wow the latter is hotter to the touch than the memory on the back of the board...But temps actually dropped 2 degrees around the board.
      I upgraded last summer to a 5700xt for 1440p a couple of months before the price hikes so I want to sell it thanks to used market prices, but I still need it for my gf's 2 screen school/work setup and my secondary smaller home theater setup so I sorta need the multiple DP/Hdmi ports.

    • @laowai2000
      @laowai2000 Před 3 lety

      I had to take back my like! Seem you are at a good number. Sold two second had gpus that purchase year ago for $300. With the $ upgraded to GTX1080ti very happy!

    • @goldzen3019
      @goldzen3019 Před 3 lety

      @Romi my used 1070 never goes above 60C while gaming

  • @BogusQuacky
    @BogusQuacky Před 3 lety +170

    Tips: If you're buying local, you have NO recourse at all. This means that you should pay 70-90% of the eBay prices if you buy locally. If they won't budge, just remind them you have a "warranty" that it wont be DOA when buying online

    • @TimberWulfIsHere
      @TimberWulfIsHere Před rokem +16

      dont think telling them that you have a warrenty is going to make them drop the price but ok.

    • @sstier48
      @sstier48 Před 9 měsíci +6

      ​@TimberWulfIsHere some people actually don't know that you have a 30 day guarantee through eBay, and want eBay prices..

    • @johnm2089
      @johnm2089 Před 9 měsíci

      wtf is a DOA? what do you mean by recourse? What they won't budge what? wtf are you on?

  • @jamesmiele3159
    @jamesmiele3159 Před 3 lety +58

    Thank you for taking time to teach people how to look out for themselves. Videos like this are very appreciated! Thank you Gamers Nexus!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem

      700 dollars for A defective card worth 250 new I wish I could find someone that dumb😭

  • @Dank_Lulu
    @Dank_Lulu Před 3 lety +289

    Again, this is timed rather nicely. As far as personal experience goes, I've bought a few used PC items online and the best advice I can give is: go with your gut. If it feels off or sketchy, move on to the next guy.

    • @proCaylak
      @proCaylak Před 3 lety +15

      that's an acquired taste. inexperienced guts are more likely to return with empty hands or empty wallet with empty hands.

    • @sandrocarletto9386
      @sandrocarletto9386 Před 3 lety +7

      sometimes it works though. i had a guy that wanted to meet in public and sounded hella sketchy. the price was 30% less than most other drives on the market so i just went for it and it works perfect

    • @googlegmail4636
      @googlegmail4636 Před 3 lety +1

      Dank Lulu
      Why you need old crap? Just keep the GTX 1080 build 3 more years! Why you keep buying????

    • @googlegmail4636
      @googlegmail4636 Před 3 lety

      @@proCaylak Just keep the GTX 1080 build 3 more years!
      SAVE MONEY! why buy crap?
      acquired taste, you need better security for the porn collection?

    • @googlegmail4636
      @googlegmail4636 Před 3 lety

      @@sandrocarletto9386 SAVE MONEY, keep the old GTX 1080 build 3 more years!

  • @mikev8500
    @mikev8500 Před 3 lety +193

    Did I really just see a dvi to vga adapter on a gamers nexus video in 2021

    • @Willay323
      @Willay323 Před 3 lety +18

      GN pulling out all the stops, they know no bounds.

    • @Bratfalken
      @Bratfalken Před 3 lety +23

      I run a DP-VGA on my RTX3080 for my secondary screen, an old 19" 4:3 AOC! :)

    • @fatality391
      @fatality391 Před 3 lety +3

      I was using dvi to vga, vga to hdmi

    • @eval_is_evil
      @eval_is_evil Před 3 lety +4

      the corporation I'm working for basically runs 50% of the workstations with this type of setup.

    • @mikev8500
      @mikev8500 Před 3 lety +7

      @@eval_is_evil in a corporation it makes some sense as they arent usually tech junkies lol my old company used display port to vga cables when yhe monitors amd computers both had display port capabilities... Made me shake my head

  • @northwestrepair
    @northwestrepair Před rokem +5

    #1 Look for a PCB color on the top edge of the PCB. If its looks dark, this card ran hot and likely to be dirty inside.
    #2 if PCB is dark at the bottom as well, it means it ran hot for a very long time. Almost guaranteed to be a miner card or a gamer who neglected cleaning their rig.
    #3 Look for a temper proof label. If it isnt there, ask the seller why. You want to know why card was opened. Was it re-pasted or re-padded ?
    If it runs little too hot, its likely done wrong. Do it the right way with proper pad thickness and paste application.
    #4 Look for missing serial number or other stickers on the PCB (unless covered by back plate) that indicated previous repairs such as but not limited to removing/replacing components and/or memory and/or GPU its self.
    How ever, i my own defense, just because its repaired, does not mean its bad. Often times you get brand new components installed which are likely to outlive the cards remaining life so dont hesitate to buy repaired cards.
    In fact, repaired cards get more attention to testing for performance and stability before selling them then those who just sell them not knowing anything about them.

  • @SparkY0
    @SparkY0 Před 3 lety +57

    I have some important information about soldat that everybody needs to know:
    You can modify the minigun bullet type in a config file so that it will shoot knives. Every game needs this, and it is the only way to play soldat. Thank you.

    • @neoqueto
      @neoqueto Před 3 lety +3

      Remember playing around with very low intervals on M79 and Barrett

    • @urugulu1656
      @urugulu1656 Před 2 lety +4

      public service announcment: miniguns are not for levitation

  • @dgw14
    @dgw14 Před 3 lety +480

    Such a needed video right now

    • @maxbet3968
      @maxbet3968 Před 3 lety +2

      I agree, very important

    • @preciadoalex123
      @preciadoalex123 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah if you like paying 200 over fair market pricing

    • @switchdeck9164
      @switchdeck9164 Před 3 lety +7

      @@preciadoalex123 no such thing as fair market pricing bc what it's worth is what someone is willing to pay for it

    • @preciadoalex123
      @preciadoalex123 Před 3 lety +6

      @@switchdeck9164 understandable, let's rephrase to, inflated gpu prices

    • @kermit56780
      @kermit56780 Před 3 lety

      My 980Ti is having shits & giggles.

  • @davepianist84
    @davepianist84 Před 3 lety +186

    I took a leap of faith once with a 680, I plugged and the fan was making a noise like turning on and off, but the seller seemed legit so I took hist word that the card was good, it ended up that I just plugged it badly and the second cable was lose, never again showed any problems

    • @Corei14
      @Corei14 Před 3 lety +10

      Oof 680 at this day and age

    • @wisdoom9153
      @wisdoom9153 Před 3 lety +6

      Ya, sometimes it's on buyer's end who made silly error; usually because we're too excited to get that card for cheaper.

    • @davepianist84
      @davepianist84 Před 3 lety +8

      @@wisdoom9153 Or like Steve mentioned, to judge the seller's character, we became friends and even up to this day I see that he's very responsable with his hardware sells.

    • @MrKillswitch88
      @MrKillswitch88 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Corei14 Don't be surprised there are people out there stuck with Fermi era cards mainly in poorer countries like Brazil.

    • @rinkyouma2320
      @rinkyouma2320 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Corei14 2 days ago, I still use a GT210. My mother gave me money to buy a better card and found a used RX460 2gb OC and my goodness, it's like night and day.haha

  • @AustinWestbro
    @AustinWestbro Před 3 lety +1

    THIS IS WHAT WE NEEDED! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR FINALLY MAKING THIS VIDEO!

  • @Charter23682
    @Charter23682 Před 3 lety +20

    Steve already mentioned this briefly, but some broken GPUs can experience problems just after running inside the system for a while. Had a GPU that would crash in 3D-Applications after 1-2 weeks of use. Reseating the card would give another period without crashes. There was zero observable sag, but I still suspect that it had something to do with the PCIe connector loosening over time.

  • @maxbet3968
    @maxbet3968 Před 3 lety +284

    Videos like this is what makes Gamers Nexus a solid group of ppl worth following 👍

    • @protectnor
      @protectnor Před 3 lety +16

      Way better than LTT. I feel like they've moved away from tech reviews and blow money just because they can, like Linus has forgotten what it's like to not be wealthy.

    • @vothaison91
      @vothaison91 Před 3 lety +1

      The value of video like this increases over time.

    • @akms828
      @akms828 Před 3 lety

      They deserve more subs

    • @chriscampbell9199
      @chriscampbell9199 Před 3 lety +1

      What ya means 😏 tuber's doing real work... Jay and Linus, GN always been good

    • @will4may175
      @will4may175 Před 3 lety +2

      Yup I watch GN, Hardware Unboxing, Jayztwocents, and for deep knowledge of parts I go to Buildzoid at Actually Hardcore Overclocking, his breakdown on the x570 boards helped me decide mine.

  • @Born2Legit
    @Born2Legit Před 3 lety +120

    Talk about perfect timing, many people are looking for GPU's in the used market so this is definitely helpful

    • @hansolo631
      @hansolo631 Před 3 lety +7

      They clearly made it in response to the great GPU depression of the '20s

    • @kermit56780
      @kermit56780 Před 3 lety +3

      Sure i'll sell my 980Ti for $1,000. #FACEPALM

    • @jeremoose_8753
      @jeremoose_8753 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kermit56780 you can still find good deals from people who have standards.

  • @xpyr
    @xpyr Před 3 lety +4

    Great video! I remember Linus doing a basic video like this, but you went into depths that made it easy to understand and what you should be looking. Thank you very much!

  • @macindog4939
    @macindog4939 Před 3 lety

    Interesting content that's also useful, thanks as always for the work you guys do!

  • @watercannonscollaboration2281

    “Linus handled it”
    Nice

  • @zakarynoel3666
    @zakarynoel3666 Před 3 lety +9

    One thing about buying replacement fans: sometimes you also need to specify the right card profile. The fans on a gigabyte gtx 1070 have the same exact model number on a 1070 mini ITX, but the length of the power connector and the gender of the head are different.

  • @TheOriginalFaxon
    @TheOriginalFaxon Před 3 lety +36

    RE: Blown capacitors, those are incredibly easy to fix. I recently repaired a fairly recent AMD motherboard that had a blown aluminium film capacitor for a friend who had sourced the capacitors already. I used a standard hakko soldering station and plenty of flux, and once the cap was replaced the board worked fine. The VAST majority of capacitor failures will not kill other components in a circuit. I have done similar repairs using far larger and more powerful capacitors, that had failed far more catastrophically, in which instance the electrolyte had eaten some of the traces partially and lifted others from the PCB. Old amps are notorious for this, and my already twice repaired tube amp I bought used was no exception. An hour of re-soldering and patching with copper wire later, plus 10 new caps, and I'd gotten the rectifier fixed just fine though, with none of the other components except the extremely high hour driver tubes needing replacing thankfully. Long story short, if you see a card being sold "as is/for parts" with a capacitor failure, you probably just found yourself a steal of a deal, and if you can't repair it you're probably not gonna be out much money to begin with. Buildzoid even has some videos on his channel documenting the process if my memory serves

    • @detecta
      @detecta Před rokem +5

      ah yes paying like 300$ for a soldering station to fix a card a third of its price

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon Před rokem +11

      @@detecta more like half that, and it's not JUST for repairing one card. Learning to solder to do electronics work and repairs will pay for the hardware in no time if you do it regularly. I've saved thousands on rework costs for repairing and updating old speakers, repaired a high end FirePro card and 2 motherboards, and I've built the equivalent of a couple thousand dollars in cables. All for a roughly $200 investment over the lifespan of my gear, including $50 on solder and flux because i've gone through probably 10-20 kilos of the stuff in the last decade. Once you learn to do it and have the tools, it's basically always cheaper to do it yourself vs buying something off the shelf, only real exception being 3.5mm cables, those fuckers are a bitch to build and I refuse to do it anymore lmao. Everything else though, I DIY. I'm actually rebuilding some cables as we speak, one of my older joints used the wrong kind of solder (turns out lead solder on gold contacts can unadhere chemically, you gotta use tin/silver), and combined with using a straight out connector when I should have used a 90 degree for the job, a solder joint eventually broke. Gonna reuse everything though, nothing's physically damaged besides that one solder joint, the wiring itself tests fine for continuity end to end. Only loss is some heat shrink tubing, a dab of flux, and some of my time (that I can also spend watching videos.

    • @benbai5808
      @benbai5808 Před 7 měsíci

      @@TheOriginalFaxon you're right and obviously know what you're doing but it isn't for everyone. Gotta be extremely careful and meticulous when first learning about pcb repair

  • @PwadigytheOddity
    @PwadigytheOddity Před 3 lety +174

    I’m finding the older, more “irrelevant” cards are getting the best prices locally. The 2080 Supers are doing really well locally. You originally reviewed these card as “uninteresting.” But it’s kind of cool that they’re the perfect storm of them not being that good at mining for them being fairly good performance, also relatively new for a used GPU (less chance of damage). And also just less people looking for them, because the 20 series was forgettable.
    I saw 2080tis for 800ish, and 2080 supers for 700 locally.
    I got a 2080ti for 850. Was in excellent condition and had the box and transferrable warranty.
    Not that great a price for a used GPU, but an amazing price in this market

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +117

      Yeah, you nailed it. They were "uninteresting" in the scope of the launch, but certainly the landscape has changed enough that they're worth considering right now. No harm in getting what you can if the price is good!

    • @A.Froster
      @A.Froster Před 3 lety +5

      Definitely a good price overall for a 2080ti considering 3070 can go high as € 1200+ in my region

    • @Amusia727
      @Amusia727 Před 3 lety +18

      Similar to Intel vs AMD here. When GN reviewed the 10400 and 10700K he gave them pretty poor reviews but now prices have dropped to the point that they can be justified whilst AMD parts have ballooned where I live. I got a 10700K for £250 where a 5800X was about £400. Same with a 10400/F where they're cheaper than a 3600 by a considerable margin (£125 vs £170 new). Of course board price needs to be taken into account here but it's funny how a product perspective can improve with just a price reduction compared to the competition (people will still shout Intel is dead though).

    • @toaster_bloke9999
      @toaster_bloke9999 Před 3 lety +4

      On Ebay in the UK, the 2080 super is going for £600-650. Meanwhile the 5700XT is going for about £750. I don't get it...

    • @unitedfools3493
      @unitedfools3493 Před 3 lety +3

      The 2080 is also a great value, probably even better than the Super, given the even less warm reception it received.

  • @pierrea3094
    @pierrea3094 Před 3 lety +170

    700$ for a used 580 that can’t be right I can’t get my brain to align that with reality Christ

    • @mud2479
      @mud2479 Před 3 lety +12

      The only ""logical"" explanation I can think of is that the card was a 8gb model and it was bought for a mining rig.

    • @fredfinks
      @fredfinks Před 3 lety +8

      yeah wtf? I dont get it, i sold an MSI gaming X 1080-ti for $750 AU in early October 2020. For some reason they went down to ~$550 in December 2020. Now they are up - recent range is $630 - $780. 1) Why the dip in december? 2) WTF is the 580 going for such insane prices in the US??? - 8gb 580s selling for $400-480 AU do conversion - way less US$

    • @fredfinks
      @fredfinks Před 3 lety +2

      @@mud2479 Hi Mud, not sure if you saw my comment but currently 8gb 580s are selling for $400-$480 AU here in oz ($309 to $370 US). why $700 in US? (please do not raid our used GPU market, we are tiny small compared to US, and normally get way screwed on prices)

    • @yoshi360360
      @yoshi360360 Před 3 lety +4

      Whoever that was paying an extra $300 usd over market price looking at the prices around here... they are sought after for mining being AMD and 8GB but no where near the price that viewer paid for unless their local used market is completely dry. Still hard to believe someone paid that much.

    • @Derael
      @Derael Před 3 lety +8

      Yeah, I don't really see how a sensible person, especially someone who watched Gamer's Nexus, would buy 580 for 700$, used or new.
      I got RX 470 (though 4 GB version) for less than 100$ just recently, and it's almost as good as 580 8 GB (at least in gaming). Doesn't make sense to pay 7x more, considering the difference. At most it's worth 200-250$.

  • @en4ble773
    @en4ble773 Před 3 lety

    this is the video I was looking for. Thank You!

  • @KingDodango
    @KingDodango Před 3 lety +21

    Unexpected use for this video: checking my GPU before trying to sell it.

    • @jmrgamer8473
      @jmrgamer8473 Před 4 měsíci

      Planning on flipping a computer for a profit and this video made me want to check the 1070 I bought for it for these kinds of signs.

  • @Amusia727
    @Amusia727 Před 3 lety +189

    Dafuq, people spend 700 bucks on a RX580? Then the seller has the audacity to have it be broken on sale

    • @davidcazares7441
      @davidcazares7441 Před 3 lety +19

      I thought selling an R9 390 for $200 was little much...

    • @winonesoon9771
      @winonesoon9771 Před 3 lety +24

      for scum bags thats a win win lol the dude was a fool to give up that much for a 580 to begin with. its like you can find gpus online ya just have to try and also sign up for them bot alerts. hell he could of bought a bot for what he spent sheesh....

    • @AlexLikesFloors
      @AlexLikesFloors Před 3 lety +3

      I sold my 1080ti for $1200

    • @wishusknight3009
      @wishusknight3009 Před 3 lety +15

      It is just stupidity to play that much or that card working or not.. Go find a 1030 for $40 until cards are available. No one is that desperate for a card.

    • @dhanajon5528
      @dhanajon5528 Před 3 lety +4

      Damn i could make a fortune selling my 580 if people are willing to pay that much for it.

  • @Calango741
    @Calango741 Před 3 lety +17

    I bought a Radeon Sapphire Vega 64 for $65 from a kid that had disassembled it because he said it had some sort of problem, and I simply cleaned it, repasted it, replaced only a couple of thermal pads that were not in good shape and used the rest that were, and reassembled it and IT WORKED GREAT!
    I could have at least potentially sold it for around $800, but instead my daughter got a great Christmas present. It's nice when a story has a happy ending, especially if you can make your daughter happy with a great Christmas present at very little cost except a little time doing something that you enjoy doing anyway!

    • @ariewijaya1679
      @ariewijaya1679 Před 3 lety +2

      and the kid read your comment now. if you have a conscience you must return the card now

  • @slimshadythe111
    @slimshadythe111 Před 3 lety

    There's always something new to learn watching your videos 😃

  • @trashmasta438
    @trashmasta438 Před 3 lety

    always enjoy vids like this since it it helps a lot of people . im fortune enough to have a few cards ive kept and make sure to keep them clean even when not in use

  • @dandanovich6729
    @dandanovich6729 Před 3 lety +18

    Even I found some things I never knew, and I am dealing with aftermarket GPUs for a very long time. Thanks!

  • @RepsUp100
    @RepsUp100 Před 3 lety +3

    A much needed video, especially at the moment, thank you

  • @CRANEREVIEWS
    @CRANEREVIEWS Před 3 lety

    Oh wow, terrific! Thank you so much for making this! :)

  • @Nostalgia_Realm
    @Nostalgia_Realm Před 3 lety +1

    11:27 Nice touch :) My experience with artifacting is that it usually appears either when you push a GPU memory clock too far or when your card is on the verge of dying. Had this with my MSI R9 270x that died months after warranty ran out. First it would crash GPU drivers and artifact, then my system wouldn't even complete post with the GPU inserted most of the time.

  • @PwadigytheOddity
    @PwadigytheOddity Před 3 lety +57

    Woah, you actually made this video. I think I and a few others suggested it a while ago. Thanks.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +33

      It was a request we started seeing pop-up over the last few months, so we were happy to add it to the production schedule!

    • @tomr3422
      @tomr3422 Před 3 lety +15

      The Approval process takes time the CEO, Snowflake is busy running the the GN empire.

  • @thomassvevo
    @thomassvevo Před rokem +65

    I recently bought a 3090 from a local guy for $750. It was dusty and used for mining for about a year, but I was willing to take a bet on it because he was willing to let me return it if it didn't work, since he hadn't used it for some time. The card was no good so I returned it to him which he was cool enough to honor. I feel much more confident buying locally.

    • @yussef961
      @yussef961 Před 11 měsíci +17

      2 problems with your reasoning that makes it mot (or mut or whatever lol dead in arabic) ah moot
      I was willing to take a bet on it
      he was cool enough to honor
      what if he was not and a fraud? for this reason alone no it's a no no

    • @AyoItsAntony
      @AyoItsAntony Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@yussef961right this is the worst advice

  • @eldraque4556
    @eldraque4556 Před 2 lety

    nice one, been waiting for this video, thank you

  • @phillipcox6756
    @phillipcox6756 Před 2 lety

    I know VERY little about PC's, would honestly never buy a used card, but I watched this video just because you guys rock, I'll send others your way to subscribe as well. Hope you never stop doing what your doing.

  • @PitboyHarmony1
    @PitboyHarmony1 Před 3 lety +73

    "If you can fix a card with bad capacitors ... you're probably not watching this video."
    Aaand ... I'm watching the video ... so I guess my level of tech savy-ness just got called out.
    And then I smiled at my chosen ignorance, by watching the rest of the video.

    • @fistymcbuttpuncher6419
      @fistymcbuttpuncher6419 Před 3 lety +9

      I suck at soldering, but I still managed to fix a couple monitors due to caps blowing.

    • @ChaosHusky
      @ChaosHusky Před 3 lety +3

      Literally doing the same, even though i'm an engineer and can re-ball/re-flow too lol I saved up for over a year instead and got a brand new card outright, plus water block! (Yep, i finally got an RTX 3090...holy shit the RAM runs hot!) I miss my 1080 Ti, but i got £500 for it and i'd fitted a massive cooler, so i didn't complain! Just enable BAR in my vBIOS already, Zotac! Funnily enough my 1080 Ti was second hand but fairly new, used for...League of Legends! Purchased a few months before the crypto crash, i paid £669.96 :D with the cooler i lost about 200 quid...but had it for almost 3 years!

    • @horscategorie
      @horscategorie Před 3 lety +2

      @@fistymcbuttpuncher6419 Can't solder well due to shaky hands... BUT Yeah, I think most people watching this probably can replace a blown cap... Now, understanding schematics - that is something else. Just like wiring your home... Yep, sure can do... but I am no electrician or electrical engineer... ;)

  • @titaniummechanism3214
    @titaniummechanism3214 Před 3 lety +3

    The last two GPUs I bought were used and from Ebay. A 1660Ti for my personal PC and a 960 for my sisters homeschooling PC. The 1660Ti smelled a bit of cigarette smoke, but the 960 was like new, even though it was sold as used and not refurbished. Both quite good deals, especially the 1660Ti. It was 220€ back in 2019.

  • @megamanx466
    @megamanx466 Před 3 lety

    Thanks again for a detailed and needed video! 😄

  • @majorlook
    @majorlook Před 3 lety

    What a great helpful video. Thanks Steve

  • @markrtoffeeman
    @markrtoffeeman Před 3 lety +9

    Steve "tech jesus" throwing shade at Linus.
    Love it.

  • @Jacklee-qh1cv
    @Jacklee-qh1cv Před 3 lety +35

    Warped pcb's are also a sign the card has been baked in an oven.

    • @horscategorie
      @horscategorie Před 3 lety

      What people will do to try to re-flow... Just open the card up and look and use a heat gun if you don't trust your hands with a soldering iron. People are nuts.

    • @Krazie-Ivan
      @Krazie-Ivan Před 3 lety +6

      @@horscategorie ...i kept a pair of 7970's running for years by baking. one needed it every 4-6mo. saved countless cards that way for customers, even if only temporarily (which i tell them going-in). PCB never warped tho... baked wrong (WAY too hot) if that happened. heat gun method warms unevenly, uncontrolled temps, & cools too quickly.

  • @Jonathan998
    @Jonathan998 Před 3 lety

    Man, this is such a useful video. Thanks

  • @pawcisq
    @pawcisq Před 3 lety +1

    I love the artifacting transitions

  • @trollwholivesu7258
    @trollwholivesu7258 Před 3 lety +59

    GN: How to get a good second hand GPU
    LTT: How to use your GPU for mining
    👀

    • @nemz7505
      @nemz7505 Před 3 lety +4

      LTT is years late on that one

    • @alexanderjohansson2671
      @alexanderjohansson2671 Před 3 lety +3

      @@nemz7505 Maybe not a year, but yeah. And quite some outdated info. Like "another 2 years of mining". No, you'd be lucky if you can mine the rest of this year at this rate.

    • @whatdafarkenhell7110
      @whatdafarkenhell7110 Před 3 lety

      Pro tip for mining, solar is pretty good, you can buy one or two marketed as camping solar systems and run a few GPU's on full throttle when the sun shines, hell you go full pro and become a sun farmer running a mining operation, or you can choose anywhere between. May the hashes be with you.

    • @vgamesx1
      @vgamesx1 Před 3 lety

      ​@@whatdafarkenhell7110 Yeah, that's fine but when the price of crypto drops like the last crash, where electricity is more expensive then what you get out of mining, it still becomes ridiculous to do that, since generated power could be better used taking anything around your house off the grid rather than farming something worth less than the cost of electricity.
      Also thought I'd mention that generally speaking those "camping solar systems" are rather overpriced for what you get, you're paying for convince (even more so in the case of folding panels), whereas just buying a panel + battery + charge controller costs almost half or less, which still leaves you with plenty left over to get a decent pure sinewave inverter rather than the cheap stepped/modified one you'll find in a lot of products.
      Yes, it's more research and more effort, but it's well worth it if you have the slightest interest in learning about solar and getting the most out of your solar system, if it's more of a passing interest and you don't care all that much then sure find something ready to go.

    • @whatdafarkenhell7110
      @whatdafarkenhell7110 Před 3 lety

      @@vgamesx1 I see you imagine a world not minting cripto, tell me more about your fantasy land.

  • @frederikk.4187
    @frederikk.4187 Před 3 lety +3

    GN makes the best content.
    It's honest, tech savvy and made with true dedication. A big thx for being who are... and making the best
    mouse mat 👍😉

  • @garadus1767
    @garadus1767 Před 3 lety

    Been watching your content for quite a while now and enjoying it still ! You motivated me to grow my hair out, you are a handsome dude :))) keep it up my man

  • @visioneer68
    @visioneer68 Před 2 lety +2

    Late to the game here, but wanted to say thank you for posting this and the preventive maintenance video. I really enjoy the way you talk about these types of things when it comes to learning/instructing to do something.
    I have an old 750ti and a EVGA GTX 1060 6GB card that I would like to see about reusing. Seems like for the types of things I do, the 1060 should still be -Good Enough- for me. My experience is pretty limited, having cobbled together parts one time into a computer from a list that someone else gave me and told me to go buy, and that was back in 2006. I have to think I can find a motherboard and cpu that I can use with the old cards I have.

  • @bige2986
    @bige2986 Před rokem +15

    I recently had to dive into the market for a new build and ended up hitting a unicorn. I did a lot of research on the card advertised. Made sure it had LHR and checked the SN against the EVGA website to find out the card was only about a year old. Pulled the trigger because it was a reasonable price but ended up receiving a completely different card with the same GPU instead. This one still had all the plastic scratch protection on it, no signs of dust, smelled brand new and had 2 gigs more memory than the one I thought was purchasing. Needless to say I was skeptical at first, but after checking the part number with Asus and contacted the seller to make sure it was okay to bench it I decided to keep it. Ended up getting an incredible deal on a basically brand new 3080.

  • @PecanPie745
    @PecanPie745 Před 3 lety +67

    All these insane prices and low stock make me wonder how extremely lucky I was to casually walk into my local Microcenter at 2 pm on a Friday and buy a 3080 after the card was only 20 minutes in stock.

    • @Erowens98
      @Erowens98 Před 2 lety +8

      5 months since this comment. Still impossible to buy new even if you're willing to pay 160% of MSRP. But i need a GPU so i just have to spread my legs and hope for gentle treatment...

    • @BiggieCMAN
      @BiggieCMAN Před 2 lety +1

      @@Erowens98 dude 2 months later and I’m hoping you get a card man, I’ve been stuck with a broken 970 for almost 2 years now and it’s annoying because it crashes every game but I can’t afford a $800 card 😂

    • @Erowens98
      @Erowens98 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BiggieCMAN aye. I got a second job (temporarily) and used the extra money to buy a 6800xt. Cost me €1200...

    • @JR-zw2vb
      @JR-zw2vb Před 2 lety

      And you had the ca$h to buy. You are extremely lucky for $ure!

    • @wheeI
      @wheeI Před 2 lety +1

      @@JR-zw2vb get a job

  • @wile-e-coyote7257
    @wile-e-coyote7257 Před rokem +1

    Super helpful video, Steve! Thank you!! My EVGA 3080 10GB FTW3 Ultra Gaming, bought directly from EVGA's B-Stock in Sept 2022, has been "Space Invader" artifacting, crashing games to desktop, PC rebooting, and even having MoBo post issues. I'm using my backup RTX 3060 XC 12gb backup card with no issues whatsoever, even when running the card full out in Ultra settings while gaming. I use a time-tested late-model Corsair RM850x to power my AMD 5600x system, built in Mar 2022. I plan to RMA the 3080 as soon as I've eliminated all possibilities (monitor cables, card DP/HDMI ports, PC case temp/cooling, power delivery, etc.)

    • @maximoxtech1125
      @maximoxtech1125 Před rokem +1

      I guess even high end cards can't escape defectiveness like this
      And its an EVGA

  • @pencilcase8068
    @pencilcase8068 Před 2 lety +2

    I got a used 1030 and I am happy with it. Seller put effort into the listing and seemed trustworthy when I picked it up from him with a friend

  • @WunderOps
    @WunderOps Před 3 lety +3

    Test the card, test the card, test the card! Low frequency may possibly be fixed with a flash of the card's bios (it's not hard at all but yeah nerve racking). The cause is that miners sometimes use a special bios that limits frequency. This really works AND is the only fix in cases where frequency has been limited intentionally with an alternate bios...

  • @lanelesic
    @lanelesic Před 3 lety +10

    One small tip about buying used is to always check out sellers trade history as well as the product itself.
    If he was buying 6xRX 580 8GB with a 1000W psu and pcie extenders, etc. that RX 580 8GB he is selling is 100% a card that was mining.

  • @Star-du2od
    @Star-du2od Před 3 lety

    Just got my mod matt! Very pleased so far.

  • @TravelinDevil76
    @TravelinDevil76 Před 3 lety

    Great video! Thank you for the info.

  • @evileyeball
    @evileyeball Před rokem +8

    I had to clean and re-paste my 4870x2 after 6 years... IT really made a big difference. I had 11 years with it before retirement

    • @theRealAD1010
      @theRealAD1010 Před rokem +1

      i retire my gpus too lol

    • @evileyeball
      @evileyeball Před rokem +1

      @@theRealAD1010 I sent it to Ewaste but I really wish I'd kept it since I did end up makign a Shadowbox dedicated to that PC which has the OS DVD and COA, The CPU and the RAM in it and I could have added the GPU to that especially since at the time i bought it it was the top GPU on the market.

  • @goddamnit452
    @goddamnit452 Před 3 lety +4

    I bought multiple 1060 6gb and 1070 and 1080ti from miners and internet cafe. Usually those came with very limited warranty from them. 7 days at best, but they sell in quite large quantities and reviews seems very positive. The cards looked dusty but not rusty/bend/scratched. The temper seal are usually untouched. I stress test them upon receiving them with 3D render, Ai workload, benchmarking software for a full 6h. And never got issues. Maybe the I got lucky for all those years. And the temps always looked really good which meant that apart from being a bit dusty they were working perfectly fine. Got even some excellent overclocking gpu for cheap. Such as a 1070 strix with OC clock till 2.15ghz at 70 celcius for only 120 usd. So, usually I buy second hand from known resellers and doing a lot of research without having the chance to test the system in shop.

  • @carllavery4442
    @carllavery4442 Před 3 lety

    Great video, I recently bought an rx480 as nothing else is available for a reasonable price. It was in good condition and had been cleaned but I noticed under load the fans were screaming at 3000rpm as it ran at just over 70 degrees. After watching you're GPU maintenance video I opened up to repaste and the die was only partially covered, paste was in reasonable condition though. Now under heavy load it runs at similar temperatures but the fans never go to full speed to maintain it and its much quieter

  • @D4rkMatter1975
    @D4rkMatter1975 Před 3 lety

    On point video, especially given the current climate i would assume many people are buying selling used a lot more right now. Thanks Steve great tips!

  • @zerotwo_.002
    @zerotwo_.002 Před 3 lety +48

    "Hopefully you got social skills " yeah sure we do have em .....

  • @jm9371
    @jm9371 Před 3 lety +6

    I sold my perfectly good EVGA 1080Ti Black edition for $400 CDN when I upgraded. I gave the buyer a 1 week warranty and he knew were I worked if there was an issue. I think that was more than fair since I paid 1100 bucks for it in 2018.

  • @mikesalas1990
    @mikesalas1990 Před 3 lety

    Yeahhhhhhh I'm taking credit for this 😄😄 i remember commenting on an old video about making a video about what to look for, etc when buying an old gpu... maybe I commented on one of Jay's but this is all me. Thank me guys. Even though Steve and his team do absolutely all the work 😄😄

  • @hi_tech_reptiles
    @hi_tech_reptiles Před 3 lety

    Even the retro market is borked. Been importing/bidding on stuff in Japan just to find decent deals. I think the WFH factor and the fact anything new is insane in price has increased demand even now, after the initial quarentine. Great vid!

  • @hazonku
    @hazonku Před 3 lety +18

    "PErhaps Linus handled it before we got it." Literally LOL'ed at that. I love that the sag example it the Aorus 1080ti Xtreme. It's a thicc boy alright & that metal shroud on that thick heat sink is hefty. I'd definitely have that issue by now if it were for having mine in a Tower 900.

  • @Kallyy
    @Kallyy Před 3 lety +38

    700 he just scammed himself, just got a 2080Ti for that

    • @FlameHidden
      @FlameHidden Před 3 lety +11

      Must be a viewer from a third world country (like me) that just converted the price back to dollars.

    • @user-qv1dp2xh5q
      @user-qv1dp2xh5q Před 3 lety +2

      I got a 3080 for 800 a month and some change ago

    • @hansolo631
      @hansolo631 Před 3 lety +1

      Individual markets might be a bit different. I don't know if I believe you though, unless you found a wild local deal. People know what they have though. People always want more than what their stuff is worth.

    • @kermit56780
      @kermit56780 Před 3 lety

      My trusty old 980Ti is laughing right now.

  • @iliankarasimirov9685
    @iliankarasimirov9685 Před 3 lety

    Steve, thank you and your team

  • @X400DYL
    @X400DYL Před 3 lety

    Informative as ever , Steve, Tech Jesus....

  • @AGCipher
    @AGCipher Před 3 lety +6

    Another one I've found to be common is a GPU hang as soon as you start any intense 3D application, but seems completely fine otherwise, these sorts of issues can also often be spotted in NVIDIA's control panel 3D rendering settings (where it has the 3D NVIDIA logo), you might see the 3D logo vertices being displaced
    "space invaders" is not just restricted to 20 series cards either, the pattern may look different, but the same issue can exist on other cards (sometimes just in a few spots off and on, other times uniformly accross the whole screen)

  • @Kisanorame
    @Kisanorame Před rokem +3

    That fan with the broken blade actually looked really cool when spinning lol

  • @bofast
    @bofast Před 3 lety

    The footage from Soldat made liking this video mandatory, if you ask me :D
    Good video overall, Steve (and Snowflake, of course).

  • @alexgavril6875
    @alexgavril6875 Před 3 lety

    Love your channel. Please keep your independent research

  • @nbowling10trio
    @nbowling10trio Před 3 lety +5

    Microcenter has new GPU for sale. Might have to wait in line a few hours before they open but it's doable. We recently bought a 3080 and a 3060 this way

  • @TerraWare
    @TerraWare Před 3 lety +16

    That older Asus card with the 2 red stripes kind of looks like the gpu in Escape From Tarkov you use to mine bitcoin with.

    • @jameswalsh5683
      @jameswalsh5683 Před 3 lety +9

      that's cause it is what it is modelled after..

  • @scoldingwhisper
    @scoldingwhisper Před 3 lety

    thanks! this helped out great when i needed to sell my broken GPUs

  • @nideko4384
    @nideko4384 Před rokem +10

    I decided to buy a used R7 265. After talking a bit with the seller about it's history (was pulled from a dead pc and he didn't know whether it worked or not) I decided that I'd give it a shot since it was sold for cheap and he seemed like an actual good-mannered person incase anything was wrong with it. Paid for the card, got it and it turned out that it boots into Windows just fine but doesn't display any video. I immediately told the seller and thankfully he returned the money that same day and was bummed just as much as I was lol. I also got to keep the card, and I am currently trying to "revive" it by trying to install NimeZ drivers for their hybrid gpu capability, since I have an igpu to use as video out. Currently waiting for an update so I can install them...
    At the end of the day I really shouldn't have dived in head first even if I knew what I was going to get myself into, but I'm still very thankful nothing too bad happened.

  • @psunknown4376
    @psunknown4376 Před 3 lety +7

    i recently sold a gtx 770 for $55 and the guy wouldn't stop thanking for a month after he bought the card

    • @smirage22
      @smirage22 Před 3 lety +3

      I just bought a GTX 750ti for 96 bucks

  • @widam
    @widam Před 3 lety

    good video, one thing I notice lately on ebay, is people selling the boxes, very good price, but when you read the description is says only box, no returns.. something to look for scammers now.

  • @SirFlukealot
    @SirFlukealot Před 3 lety

    This is helpful as a seller as well, I have an old RX480 that I'd like to go to a happy home now I have a new GPU, the things you mentioned are things I will add to the eBay listing to showcase that it is working. I'll take videos of the GPU-Z profile, and it running a benchmark for people's peace of mind when buying

  • @davidepannone6021
    @davidepannone6021 Před 3 lety +20

    Moral of the story: don't buy blind. Either do so in person or make a discord/skype live call with the dude showing you how the gpu actually works running benches and a game or two. Especially on 4+ year old cards or new cards sold at msrp.

    • @obey112el
      @obey112el Před 3 lety

      Have you done, this or have this experience to buy gpu to know what gpu are good

    • @davidepannone6021
      @davidepannone6021 Před 3 lety

      @@obey112el i tend not to buy second hand stuff so no. But if i was to buy, i would do the same exact thing i said in my comment. Make the dude join a live call and show me the card working in some bench/game if i cannot purchase in person. If we were on person I'll ask to show me the card in his build working. If he doesn't accept, walk away.

    • @omegaPhix
      @omegaPhix Před 3 lety

      Or just pay with Paypal

    • @davidepannone6021
      @davidepannone6021 Před 3 lety

      @@omegaPhix you'd still have to go through the hassle to open a dispute tho. Easily avoidable.

    • @omegaPhix
      @omegaPhix Před 3 lety +8

      ​@@davidepannone6021 If you find a good deal on a GPU in these times and want video proof with game tests you wont get the card.
      There's 100% already someone else in the line who'll take the card with less of a hassle for the seller.

  • @robwhitmore3040
    @robwhitmore3040 Před 3 lety +12

    "that's social stuff, hopefully you've got some skills their already"
    GN really doesn't know their audience

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Před 3 lety +1

    Would be great if we can get a video on heat sink replacements/aftermarket overviews on video cards, such as the one Arctic provides.

  • @freeboski
    @freeboski Před 3 lety

    OMG Soldat, thats a blast from the past! I loved that game sooo much!

  • @WardyLion
    @WardyLion Před rokem +5

    I bought a 3070ti FE back in March from eBay as a 40th birthday gift to myself. I'd been saving up while being very annoyed with GPU prices but they got to a point where they were, according to many in the know, as good as they were going to be for a while. It was "brand new" and "only out the box for photos" but the seller had been on eBay over a decade and had thousands of positive feedback points with no negative or average feedback.
    eBay offered the buyer protection thing so I went for it and, so far, it's been bang-on. When it arrived it was in pristine condition without a mark or speck of dust on it anywhere, and it installed without a hitch. As he said himself: "I wish you many years of happy gaming!" and so far there's no indication that wont be the case.

    • @gbodybala9295
      @gbodybala9295 Před rokem

      how much did you pay? feel like thats a big part to leave out ! (:

    • @WardyLion
      @WardyLion Před rokem

      @@gbodybala9295 More than I would now, less than most at the time.

  • @UTxTheArchangel
    @UTxTheArchangel Před 3 lety +8

    I think it's really hard to not fall for used cards. A lot of people are desperate for GPUs, not even just the 30 series. People would take a 2060 or 1660 if they could get their hands on it. For myself I've looked at ebay a lot. I'd love to have a 3060 ti to replace my 980 ti, but I'd settle for a 2070 super...but there is no settle. So people like me sit and wait, hoping things will be better this month, then wait til next month. Then you kinda just cave in and buy scalped cards or bite on an unknown that could be damaged, broken card.

    • @welomm345
      @welomm345 Před rokem +1

      I did this, but I did get a very good deal on a EVGA FTW3 RTX 3080 10GB LHR, guy was genuine and only used the card for gaming after work, he also stated that he purchased the card back in February this year. He cleaned it with compressed air before sending it to me. Very big risk but now I’ve seen it and tested it no issues what so ever. Card was basically brand new, not tampered with & even the box was in mint condition, I paid £690 for it here in the UK, everything is way more expensive then the USA for computer components so what I paid was actually a good price for how clean and nearly new the card was.

    • @nightrider4111
      @nightrider4111 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@welomm345how long did it last ?

    • @welomm345
      @welomm345 Před 9 měsíci

      @@nightrider4111 still using it now, solid card no issues at all.

  • @Metal_Masher
    @Metal_Masher Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the tips in this video on buying second hand gpu's, I would love for you to make a video on using 3d-printers for making support for gpu's to stop sag which in a number cases the heatsink lifts off the card causing overheating problems in the future for the user as well potential causing damage to the pcb potential breaking the card.

  • @9999plato
    @9999plato Před rokem

    You da man Steve. Keep up the good work.

  • @andrewvirtue5048
    @andrewvirtue5048 Před 3 lety +6

    11:43 "Looks like Linus handled it" lmao.

  • @maxair95
    @maxair95 Před 3 lety +19

    'cant have a defective gpu if the card doesnt exist in stock'

  • @UrlOn2Wheels
    @UrlOn2Wheels Před 3 lety

    Needed this for a cheap RTX 2060S for se nearby. Thank you GN!

  • @tomaskrulis5796
    @tomaskrulis5796 Před 3 lety

    Awesome, guys, this is GOLD!

  • @sandervr10
    @sandervr10 Před 3 lety +13

    The best tip when buying used : only buy cards you can pick up at the sellers home

  • @darkSorceror
    @darkSorceror Před 3 lety +20

    "That's all social stuff. Hopefully you've got some skills there already"
    *laughcries in gamer*

    • @shockesta
      @shockesta Před 3 lety

      *trashtalks the seller about on his kd*

  • @ahmedlag4909
    @ahmedlag4909 Před 3 lety +1

    This tech tips is what we need right now

  • @heytheresakitty
    @heytheresakitty Před 3 lety

    I met a now really good friend when i sold him a 1060ssc. 3 years later a little buddy of mine needed a gpu and i was able to buy my same model back for a new 13yr old builder. Guy is a wealth of pc information and im super glad i sold him my card all those years ago,

  • @langam7017
    @langam7017 Před 3 lety +51

    When I'm selling used GPUs, I always clean and repaste them. It takes literally like 15 minutes (especially with the older cards I'm usually selling) and then I and the buyer at least know that they're getting an old card in as good a condition as it can be.
    And I can get ~10 to 20 bucks more for a cleaned and repasted card, which is nice.