Using Your PS5 Vertically May Result in Hardware Failure (pcmag.com) 84
The PS5 looks to have a design fault that can take months to appear and only seems to happen if you use the console while it's in a vertical orientation. From a report: As Wololo reports, hardware repair specialists working on PS5 consoles that fail to boot are finding the problem is caused by the liquid metal thermal interface Sony used on the custom AMD Zen 2 CPU.
When the PS5 is oriented in a vertical position, over time the liquid metal is moving and spilling out on to the components surrounding the CPU. This also means the liquid metal is no longer evenly spread across the chip it's meant to help cool.
Poor AMD (Score:5, Funny)
The RX 7900 XTX overheats when mounted horizontally, and the PS5 overheats when used vertically. Clearly the answer is a fractal case with diagonal mounts.
That's not an AMD problem (Score:5, Interesting)
And AMD isn't having any issues with the 7900 line per se, it's the coolers (likely the vapor chambers). AMD provides some vague guidelines there but it's mostly up to the board partners. There are no "reference" XTX cards made by AMD. Even the "reference" models are still Sapphire.
On the plus side I'm pretty confident Sapphire will make it right.
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I'll say that my console is setup that way specifically so that I can wall mount it. I keep the gaming TV on a wall with the consoles mounted near it so that the whole thing can swing out of the way when not in use.
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I keep the gaming TV on a wall with the consoles mounted near it so that the whole thing can swing out of the way when not in use.
You could add a little shelf on a hinge so the gaming console could be horizontal when the console was swung out and vertical when it was folded back against the wall.
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PS1 - top loading lit slightly curved
PS2 - Nice flat top
PS3 - Convex case
PS4 - Nice Flat top
PS5 - Unnecessarily wavy side panels
Lets hope the PS6 comes in a pizza box.
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If you're basing this on Sony consoles, it might be useful to remember that Sony has somehow always used shit optical drives for them.
Re: That's not an AMD problem (Score:2)
Re: That's not an AMD problem (Score:2)
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IIRC, the 360 was the worse of the bunch. I never had it eat or scratch a disc like a friend, but it was always the slowest and loudest when in use.
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consoles have always had issues when ran vertically, from the PS2 through the 360.
Yeah but for the PS5 Sony seems to have intended vertical to be the "normal" orientation. All boxart typically shows the console oriented that way (at least more frequently than horizontally), and the design aesthetic certainly looks out of place with it horizontal.
The console should be able to operate correctly in a manner in which they are clearly showing it to be used.
Re: That's not an AMD problem (Score:2)
The PS1 often HAD to be used vertically after a year or two. And unfortunately, there was no vertical mounting. I know like a dozen people who had to jam the console between the TV and a shelf to keep it upright.
Re: That's not an AMD problem (Score:2)
The PS5 is the first I know of to be sold with the explicit intention that vertical mounting is the preferred one.
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KISS : rotating mounts ; wireless mouse and keyboard (or whatever that thing consoles use is called). Leave the fan stationary (w.r.t. the motherboard/ chassis) and spin the entire machine.
Would the orientation of the cooling slots on the console affect the forcing of ventilation into the rotating chassis?
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What made you come to that wrong conclusion. The most obvious answer is to put the PS5 into a 3-axis spinner like the one they train astronauts in.
That's what she said.. (Score:1)
But it worked out anyway.
Similar problem decades ago (Score:5, Interesting)
Reminds me of a similar problem decades ago, where there were reports that using the console in a vertical orientation caused the CD-ROM drive to fail prematurely. I can't remember the console now (maybe the Wii?) or if this was ever proven or just urban legend at the time.
Re:Similar problem decades ago (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Similar problem decades ago (Score:5, Funny)
Does that mean the original PlayStation never had issues in Australia?
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I'm in the southern hemisphere (albeit not Australia) and it's the first I've heard of this problem. QED.
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The PlayStation issue was because the drive used a plastic part for the laser sled that wore out.. Turning the console upside down made it run on the opposite side of the part that wasn't worn, doubling the lifespan.
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My Wii quickly got to where it would only work horizontally - yes, optical drive reasons.
I actually changed the optical drive about a year ago.
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The problem is obvious (Score:5, Funny)
You're holding it wrong.
Re:The problem is [Even More] obvious (Score:1)
Liquid metal? (Score:3, Funny)
Are they using mercury for cooling?
Or molten lead/sodium ? (surely it doesn't need THAT much cooling)
Re:Liquid metal? (Score:4, Informative)
"Liquid metal" is the trade name for a widely used thermal interface material.
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Are they using mercury for cooling?
"Liquid metal thermal interface" is probably reporter-speak for thermal paste.
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The two of you are coming dangerously close to having nerd status revoked ;).
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Finally, they can hang out with the cool crowd.
Re:Liquid metal? (Score:5, Insightful)
its a gallium alloy that has a melting point around room temperature making it a liquid during application. Those alloys have better thermal conductivity (better for cooling) and are electroconductive which means potential shorts when spilled.
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That stuff is really going to be fun around areas that use a lot of aluminum, like industrial shops and stuff. A little bit of gallium can ground a plane for good.
Wish they designed their cases around a closed loop liquid cooler, or the tiny refrigerant filled heat pipes found in a lot of Android phones. It may not be as high tech, but at least it would handle heat better.
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Look up the PowerMac G5. The last few units Apple sold used a liquid cooler. Unfortunately, over the years the liquid turns out to corrode the seals and leak out. Below the cooling units is the power supply.
There are YouTube videos of people plugging in the G5s and letting the smoke out.
The liquid isn't even special - it's Chevy Demron or something bog standard coolant. It just wasn't meant to be used for decades without being changed, I gue
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Re: Liquid metal? (Score:4, Insightful)
Thermal Paste. (Score:1)
Re: Liquid metal? (Score:3)
Its mostly gallium indium and tin and was a rage fad back when they were designing these things ... I don't think anyone else uses it anymore as it attacks copper and is nearly impossible to clean plus its conductive which is what you want leaking in your ps5
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Its mostly gallium indium and tin and was a rage fad back when they were designing these things ... I don't think anyone else uses it anymore as it attacks copper and is nearly impossible to clean plus its conductive which is what you want leaking in your ps5
Absolutely correct. They also have a foam surround to try to inhibit any metal from escaping but it seems to rely largely on surface tension and not actual closed cell confinement (perhaps for thermal expansion reasons). It probably does not help the units are sometimes subject to vibration from speakers.
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Liquid metal is widely used by EOMs and is popular with hobbyists too. For example, Lenovo uses it in many if its higher end laptops, and I believe so does Dell and many other brands.
The main issue is that it is difficult to apply without getting it everywhere, and it's conductive. That's less of an issue for assembly lines where it is applied mechanically.
Performance is significantly better than other thermal interface material.
Re: Liquid metal? (Score:2)
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Liquid Metal thermal compounds are a newer design of a gallium-indium-tin alloy that is liquid at room temperature, so it is easy to apply. It is entirely metal (100% metal), so it is slightly more thermally conductive than traditional thermal paste materials.
Re: Liquid metal? (Score:2)
The bad news is itâ(TM)s electrically conductive as well. So not only is it more prone to leaking off the processor since itâ(TM)s literally a liquid above room temperature, it will also short out any components it leaks onto, both of which are attributes traditional thermal paste doesnâ(TM)t share.
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Its gallium based alloy
WobbleGate 5 (Score:2)
Good to know! (Score:1)
Mine is vertical and I've not had any issues but may as well flatten it out and stop the Morphing Madness from eating my machine!
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Re:Good to know! (Score:5, Funny)
Just turn it onto the other side for a few months, then flip sides every month from then on.
That’s for casuals. I have my entire system on a rotisserie with a EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN X 12GB sear plate. So many BTUs in that puppy.
Re: Good to know! (Score:1)
Great Point (Score:1)
Just turn it onto the other side for a few months, then flip sides every month from then on.
Great point, even if I did want to put it on the side better to let it ooze back into place for a while.
New hotness (Score:2)
It looks like the new hotness for thermal paste is the "Honeywell 7950 phase change thermal pad". Lenovo is using it in all their new gaming laptops. Supposedly, it is very reliable and does not require periodic changing.
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Linus Tech Tips recently reviewed PTM7950: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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All not needed. The difference in temperature is minuscule if the cooler is mounted right. There is a reason traditional power electronics uses and continues to use just the regular white paste. The only reason to use a phase-change pad is easier application (a regular pad does not cut it for CPUs, too thick).
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There is a reason traditional power electronics uses and continues to use just the regular white paste.
The last couple things I took apart used the dark grey paste. I got a huge syringe of it for $5, it's like 20cc or something. Testing has shown that the metal-bearing pastes are more effective, though. Arctic Silver 5 is supposed to be nonconductive, but they also say not to get it on pins or components... but it also doesn't run away like liquid metal, so it's a reasonable medium.
Not Surprising (Score:1)
Sony is leader of making absolutely shit hardware. Their consoles suck. Their TVs suck. Their cameras suck. Last decent thing they made was the discman in the 90s.
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Yep. Had a Vaio laptop. Died from overheating in regular office-type use. Had to re-solder the PCMCIA card slot several times before because these cretins did not screw it in but relied entirely on the solder connections to keep it in place. Very sleek though. But I will never buy Sony hardware again. These people suck.
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IME the much later Discman units are actually a lot more reliable than the early ones. I still have a late era car discman with mp3 support and something like 60 or 120 seconds of anti-skip, and I really abused it and it's held up. And it has pretty great battery life, too.
My early discman died rapidly, you can't hardly find a vintage one that still works.
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Hum.. No.
I can't believe for the life of me that I am defending a Sony product, but the PS Vita is an excellent and reliable (Gasp!) product.
The first generation even has an OLED screen, my first device with one.
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Ok, except that UMDs were shit technology. So, while the Vita might not have been the worst thing on its own, it was paired with failure and guaranteed to be so.
Sony doesn't invent good technology. They just don't.
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I must've gotten a later model. Mine had an anti-skip that worked surprisingly well.
Rotisserie PS5 (Score:2)
The solution is to stick the vertical PS5 on a slow rotisserie to rotate it. That way the liquid metal remains evenly coated over the CPU.
Vertical consoles is usually not a great idea (Score:1)
I worked in a GameStop as Assistant Manager from 1999 to nearly 2003 and a part time stint in 2005-2007 (for the discount when the Xbox360 launched and just stayed on). I was also the resident carpenter/mechanic/computer tech in the store. If something needed to be fixed, I was the "Mikey" that did it. The staff often asked for my help even after I left to fix things because we remained friends. I fixed numerous PS1, PS2, and Xbox360 consoles during that time.
A lot of times a system wasn't checked well by a
Which orientation is which? (Score:2)
Which is vertical and which is horizontal? That is, is the PS5 a device that's 39cm wide and 10cm high, or 39cm high and 10cm wide? Not knowing this, I have no idea whether or not my PS5 is currently positioned in a vertical or a horizontal position.
Not AMD's Fault (Score:2)
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No one told Sony to put a small heatsink on an overtaxed system.
Literally not the issue being discussed here, but I wish you luck finding a relevant thread to post that comment in.
No big deal (Score:1)
Re: No big deal (Score:2)
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