- Joined
- 1 Dec 2012
- Posts
- 37
Button on psu if its not an on/off switch
Likely its a psu self test button possibly
The power supply has a toggle switch marked on-off and a black push and release button?
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Button on psu if its not an on/off switch
Likely its a psu self test button possibly
Do graphics cards have unique ID numbers a bit like mobile phones?
The devil in me just thought Amazon has Trillions...order a RTX2080TI from them direct and send them back the faulty one....It'll then go back to Zotac where it belongs.
Court route...not sure if the grief, letter writing, facts gathering, sleepless nights, traveling to court etc, etc is worth it.
Then you either get them to fix or get a full refund (might be only partial given you got some use, not entirely sure).
The letter states that the retailer is in breach of contract. What contract? The only contract is the standard 12 months. That has lapsed. There is no expected lifespan either. All warranties on parts from manufacturers are not valid to the customer, if the retailer doesn't want to pass them on, that's tough. You are out of SB Computers warranty and did not purchase an extended one. There is no point sticking up for the small guy if he doesn't have a leg to stand on.^Worth bearing in mind that SB Computers won't want the hassle of going to court either. Plus, if they lose then a Judge could order them to cover hundreds of pounds in costs (on top of settling your claim). There are strong incentives for them to settle this before it goes to court, but first you have to make them believe you will take it that far (and win).
There's a template letter here:
https://www.which.co.uk/consumer-ri...-item-to-be-repaired-or-replaced-adL425f1TlgZ
The letter states that the retailer is in breach of contract. What contract? The only contract is the standard 12 months. That has lapsed. There is no expected lifespan either. All warranties on parts from manufacturers are not valid to the customer, if the retailer doesn't want to pass them on, that's tough. You are out of SB Computers warranty and did not purchase an extended one. There is no point sticking up for the small guy if he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
The letter states that the retailer is in breach of contract. What contract? The only contract is the standard 12 months. That has lapsed. There is no expected lifespan either. All warranties on parts from manufacturers are not valid to the customer, if the retailer doesn't want to pass them on, that's tough. You are out of SB Computers warranty and did not purchase an extended one. There is no point sticking up for the small guy if he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
It should state 'in breach of Sale of Goods Act', not 'the contract'. Under the Sale of Goods Act goods must be fit for purpose. Being fit for purpose something shouldn't fail in 14 months of use.
No, it shouldn't.
A contract to supply goods is formed at the point of sale. The Consumer Rights Act (2015) Part 1, Chapter 2, sets out a consumer's rights in relation to that contract. It isn't the Act which is being breached, but the contract between the retailer and the customer.
Fair enough, my mistake


It was fit for purpose for the 12 months it was used. Things fail and there has to be a cut off point. You will lose the case. If you don't take it to court you will be inconsistent in your word.
Thank you CuriousTomCat for backing me up.
Haggisman, budget or high end doesn't matter. It was of satisfactory quality, then failed. If the user is hell bent on getting it fixed, find a local electronics engineer.
Motherboard: Asrock x570 phantom gaming 4
I came across this asus motherboard diagnostic led video:
The motherboard is an Asus x570 gaming extreme or something like that.