Gutted

Or he installed the HSF directly onto the socket without the CPU in place and screwed it down, and down, and.... oh dear.

But unholy mother of silicon that's one seriously messed up socket, whatever happened to it! :O
 
TBH I've only ever messed around in a pc and know very little. But the lack of compassion and general **** take of the OP here is somewhat unnerving. Now maybe he did do something wrong, but the whole " lol your a idiot with no common sense" isn't right. Offer advice or say bad luck, but dont laugh.
Just my 2 cents.
 
TBH I've only ever messed around in a pc and know very little. But the lack of compassion and general **** take of the OP here is somewhat unnerving. Now maybe he did do something wrong, but the whole " lol your a idiot with no common sense" isn't right. Offer advice or say bad luck, but dont laugh.
Just my 2 cents.

If the OP admitted it and just said, "Im 13 I made a mistake with the cooler and its broken the socket". I think everyone would be more helpful and sympathetic to his issue.
 
When I had Biostar Tpower P55, all I had was 2 or 3 bent pins which was easily sorted out, but because 1 pin was broken it was all it needed for a rejected RMA.

That socket on that Asus boared pictured has about 200 broken pins or something, I will be amazed if Asus will even repair it, they will charge you as well, probally £30-£40 I think, thats if they can fix it.

AMD sockets for the win!! :)
 
That socket on that Asus boared pictured has about 200 broken pins or something, I will be amazed if Asus will even repair it, they will charge you as well, probally £30-£40 I think, thats if they can fix it.

AMD sockets for the win!! :)

It doesn't make any difference how many pins are bent/broken. If you pay Asus they will remove the current socket and replace it with a new one.
 
If the OP admitted it and just said, "Im 13 I made a mistake with the cooler and its broken the socket". I think everyone would be more helpful and sympathetic to his issue.

Indeed, The fact that there was this whole "too much uneven pressure" bla bla lies just wrecked any compassion that he could have recieved. As soon as Dave0w posted his view of what happened it became more and more believable as to what actually happened.

Wow, i've not built my PC yet but these Intel sockets seem really delicate ?

I will have to be extra extra careful :)

They are not delicate at all if treated correctly. As long as no sideways or upward force is imparted on the pins then they dont move from their position. Getting a massive slab of kitchen roll and scrubbing the socket however is a recipe for disaster. Either use a chemical cleaner with compressed air to disolve and disperse the mess or use a lint free cloth going in the DIRECTION of the pin grain (last resort).

In short, as long as you dont man handle the pins they dont break :)

It doesn't make any difference how many pins are bent/broken. If you pay Asus they will remove the current socket and replace it with a new one.

+1 Flat rate fee for socket replacement. Definately cheaper than a new board. Hopefully the OP's CPU is ok however it is a valuable lesson in both correct installation practices and not lying.
 
Looks to me like something, possibly the cpu, has been dropped into the socket whilst fitting. Sorry to say Bend Over Boy!!!! In the 16+ years i have been building systems and workstations i have not seen anything as bad...
 
1) Thats Gigabyte
2) His socket is OBVIOUSLY user damaged which no warranty on earth will cover unless the engineer is gullible.
 
There was a thread a while ago were one of the OCUK staff posted pic's of RMA'ed boards and the "story's" behind them, think there might be a new addition

I missed that one - can you remember what it was called so I can search? :)

Anyway, sorry for the OP's misfortune....maybe he is blameless, you never know. On the other hand, OCUK is not the place to try and pull a cover-up :p
 
The OP just needs to get the board fixed and next time, he should not be doing vodka eye shot cleaning the socket with a wire brush.
 
Proof that 99.9% of pc errors are between the computer chair and the pc.

To top it off they either never admit it, like our friend the OP here... or are too stupid to realise what they done, accusing the PC of doing it. They only do what you tell them at the end of the day, they don't have minds of there own, (yet)
 
This is why I video all my new builds from unboxing to power on.

And inspect each part the second there out of the box.

Anything wrong. I repackage call up and send video if requested :D

On the same note, If i oppsie some hardware it also makes for a funny reaction recording of me tossing parts across the room and re ordering.
 
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