After weeks of examining allegations that the power cables for its RTX 4090 graphics card were melting and burning, Nvidia now claims it may have discovered the cause: the wires simply weren’t fully plugged in.
Nvidia stated that it is currently looking into the claims but that its findings “indicate” an insecure connector has been a widespread problem in a post to its customer support site on Friday. Additionally, it claims to have received 50 or so reports of the problem.
The flagship card from Nvidia uses a power connector known as a 12VHPWR, a new standard that isn’t natively supported by the majority of power supplies that consumers now have in their PCs. Due to this, an adaptor, or “power dongle,” as Friday’s post refers to it, is included in the box. Initial user complaints blamed the adapter, while some claimed that their $1,599 GPU had also been harmed by the melting cable.
It could be easy to read the company’s findings as shoving blame onto the users. Sure, Nvidia doesn’t come right out and say that it’s a user error, but it’s heavily implied in the post. It also seems like a very convenient explanation, since people have been speculating for almost a month that the issue is caused by something more complex, like bad soldering or wires too small to reliably handle the massive amounts of power pumped through.

However, GamersNexus, an outlet that’s respected in the PC-building community for its rigorous testing, basically came to the same conclusion earlier this week. A video posted on Wednesday by the outlet, which inspected damaged adapters sent in by viewers and did extensive testing and reporting on the issue, showed that the connectors had wear lines, implying that they hadn’t been completely inserted into the slot. GamersNexus even says that some people seem to have missed a full connection by several millimeters. Its video shows that a loose connection could cause the plug to heat up dramatically if it were plugged in poorly and tilted at an angle.
Nvidia’s post includes a picture of what the connector looks like when it’s not fully plugged in, and it seems much easier to miss than something that’s out by a full 2mm and being held at an angle (potentially because of the cables being pulled back too tightly during installation). It’d be even easier to miss with a third-party RTX 4090 card instead of the Nvidia version shown in the images below.
If you’ve got one of these cards on your computer, you should probably double-check yours looks like the bottom one.

It’s worth noting though, that Nvidia may not be completely blameless here. Another thing that jumps out about the picture it posted is that the connector has a locking key. In theory, that’s a feature that would prevent this sort of thing from happening, as long as it gives good feedback when you plug it in. According to GamersNexus, however, the adapters don’t audibly click into place, even when fully inserted.
That aside, the testing done by Nvidia and GamersNexus doesn’t seem to point to manufacturing defects as the main culprit (the outlet’s video on Wednesday did say that debris left during manufacturing may have been an aggravating factor). Either way, though, an unnamed spokesperson for the company told GamersNexus on Friday that “any issues with the burned cable or GPU, regardless of cable or GPU, will be processed” for a replacement.
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