How To Avoid Getting An Order Of Ryzen Toast
EXPOsing The Cause
The stories of self destructing Ryzen 7000 chips, both the Ryzen 7000X3D and standard models, has been verified and AMD has responded. The good news is that anyone who has encountered this is officially urged to contact AMD support, which suggests that you will be able to get a replacement if your chip did die from excessive voltages. You may still need to reach out to your motherboard vendor as well, if the chip deformed enough to damage the pins in the ZIF socket but it is likely they too will be supportive.
The exact cause seems to be as was originally theorized, excessive SoC voltages are causing electrical and thermal damage to the chips, releasing the magic smoke and turning them back into sand. There are a number of ways this can occur, and not all of them involve manual overclocking. In some cases it is the automatic overclocking applied by AMD’s EXPO which can feed unsafe voltages, hence AMD’s quick willingness to make things right.
There will be new BIOS updates from motherboard vendors to ensure this stops happening, and AMD are also looking at ways to prevent anyone to . If you are running a Ryzen 7000 system you should probably disable EXPO and any overclocking you applied for now, and use software or the BIOS to monitor your SoC voltages. We expect a fix from AMD to ensure that the voltage limits cannot be circumvented, be warned this means you might not get the same level of overclock you have now once you install the fix.
To safeguard their chips from additional harm, users should monitor their SoC voltage in the BIOS or by using utilities like HWiNFO, disable EXPO profiles, or manually adjust the voltage to secure levels. Extreme overclockers may face reduced overclocking limits due to the impending voltage cap.
More Tech News From Around The Web
- Microsoft may stop bundling Teams with Office amid antitrust probe threat @ The Register
- UK government blocks Microsoft’s proposed Activision purchase @ Ars Technica
- Linux Kernel 6.3 Released @ Slashdot
- Thousands of Apache Superset servers exposed to RCE attacks @ Bleeping Computer
- Building your own private 5G is as easy as Wi-Fi @ The Register
Great article. I have a Ryzen 7000 and I disabled EXPO and lowered my SoC voltages. Now my CPU is safe and cool. AMD should fix this ASAP. Ryzen 7000 rocks but needs better software.
Best regards, Hanna from CodeIT (https://codeit.us/)