These designs should always fail safe. A fuse should always blow before a connector or wire melts. Preferable (but much harder to design) would be that no current flows until the connector is fully seated.
All bets would be off if there were major accidental damage, like somebody spilling a soda on the gpu... But there's no excuse for unsafe design when we're talking about such a minor and easily missed user error.
Thats not how it really works. The user is ment to install the power cable correctly. There are lots of electronics that will break or go on fire if the power is not installed correctly. This issue happens with
micro USB cables. There have been recalls if it was the cable that was the
problem. Extension cords can overheat and cause fires when used
improperly.
If you connect the circuit wires to the wrong terminals on an outlet,
the outlet will still work, but the polarity will be backward. When this happens, a lamp, for example, will have its bulb socket sleeve energized rather than the little tab inside the socket. You can be killed by this issue.
Most if not all electricity
wiring issues are dangerous. The end user has the responsibility to do it correctly and safely.
With PC's drawing to much power from the motherboard can melt the
12 volt pins on the 24 pin atx connector. GPU's didn't limit the power drawn in the past from the PCIe socket.
Melted 8 pin cpu connector (multiple pins) and 24 pin connector (just single pin)
Melted 8 Pin picture.
Melted 24-pin picture.
A faulty PSU can also cause this issue.
Burnt 24-Pin connector and random shutdowns Reason here, It's a bad wire to socket connection I suppose and it's a good idea to get a new PSU before you break something... I was told it was either a bad connection or my power supply just overheated and over-volted on the pins causing the first bsod. People can do this easly by overclocking a CPU or with sli setups. This is why getting enough power is more than a good idea. Why overclocking old systems with old PSUs can end in a burning smell.
The whole core attack on nVidia is that this melting happens only with the new 12-pin gpu power connector and not the old 8-pin.
Here's an 8-pin GPU connector burned.
The
RX 580 would burn up 8-pin power cables as well.
Here is another 8-pin user error.
learned this in the hard way. 3090.. always use 2 seprate pcie power for pin1 and 2.
Yet its just the 12-pin connect that has design issues or maybe its a PR attack on nvidia? As this issue has been happening on other connectors whenever a user does something dumb. Even 8-pin connector burn when used wrong.