Can I FIX this $10,000 CPU??
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The video opens with a high value moment of truth: Linus acknowledges he has damaged a $10,000 Xeon CPU after an accidental drop, and he walks through the immediate implications, including a dented side and a memory channel that no longer functions. He explains the plan to salvage the situation by loading the CPU into different test benches and boards, hoping to regain at least a partial working system. The host inventories a replacement motherboard with an LGA 3647 socket and begins a methodical bench procedure, including reseating memory, checking the heatsink and mounting pressure, and evaluating whether the CPU still posts. As the testing unfolds, he shifts through a sequence of quick experiments, from trying a different RAM slot to swapping boards, all with the central question of whether the CPU can be revived without spending thousands. The video culminates in a post that shows the system booting with reduced RAM and CPU cores detected, but the attempt to fix the damaged memory channel is not successful, leaving the outcome ambiguous yet still providing an engaging behind‑the‑scenes look at the hardware repair process. Throughout, a sponsor segment for Massdrop and HiFiMan headphones is integrated, and Linus reflects on the practical lesson that sometimes hardware failures happen and repairs can be unpredictable, but the journey itself offers value in learning what does and does not work.
Topics · technology · hardware · repair · sponsorships · science_and_tech_experiments
Questions answered
- What went wrong with the CPU after the drop?
- The CPU had a dent on the side and one memory channel appeared nonfunctional, affecting the system's ability to post with all RAM channels.
- What approach did Linus take to try to revive the CPU?
- He attempted to repair and test the CPU using multiple motherboards and RAM configurations on a test bench, including reseating components and trying alternate boards, to see if the system would post and run.
- Was the CPU finally fixed or replaced in the video?
- No definitive repair was achieved; the system booted with reduced RAM and cores, but the damaged memory channel remained unrepaired, so replacement or more extensive repair would still be required.