Talk:Bumpgate
Sources to add, further reading, and "why"
Sources to add:
https://www.semiaccurate.com/2009/08/21/nvidia-finally-understands-bumpgate/
^ All primary sources originally from Wikipedia's source page for "-gate Scandals"; just adding them for convenience for myself and anybody else who wants to contribute to the page.
Further research:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Za7WTNwAX0c - Video from RIP Felix about the cause and misdiagnosis of the PS3's YLOD. It's a bit of a long watch, so the most significant bits are gonna be from about 27:56 to 39:43, 48:02, and 53:07. 56:20 discusses reballing, and I believe there's even a clip of one of Louis' videos in that part, but that might be getting too far out of the scope of this article's purpose.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2d6IMBS8oY - Chapter 5 of the Xbox documentary mentioned in RIP Felix's video; discusses Red Ring of Death.
https://www.psx-place.com/threads/research-experimental-nec-tokin-capacitors-replacement-ylod.25260/ - PSX-Place thread for fixing PS3 Yellow Light of Death (YLOD), primarily by replacing NEC-Tokin capacitors, which many misdiagnosed as the defect with early "Phat" PS3s' for several years (when most of the time, it was Bumpgate-related). (Page 204 has RIP Felix's "catch-all" post that he links to in the description of his video.)
Why did you make this page?
1) I'm a bit of a console geek. :P
2) Though Bumpgate is "old news" (2006 old, to be specific), I think the responses of the companies involved (Nvidia, Sony, Microsoft, etc.) indicates a bit of a pattern not only in the companies themselves, but also in the video game console/tech industry. A trend that continues to this day. When these issues were first appearing, I recall that several of these companies were denying that there was even a defect, putting the responsibility on the consumer to fix their devices. It was a widespread enough issue that I think it's well worth having a full article for. - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 19:34, 1 June 2025 (UTC)
- Couple of additional sources:
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qKtS_uxdcU - Another (long) RIP Felix video, but on the Xbox 360. (yeah, the AI generated art in parts of it is a bit distracting- try to ignore it; the info is the important part)
- "A systematic approach to qualification of 90 nm low K flip chip" - Amkor/IBM study mentioned in the above video. I don't know if this is free to access; I'll check it later to be sure.
- Side note for anyone new to editing if they want to contribute: in regards to Felix's videos, remember he's usually not the primary source for the info he's stating in the video, and the best thing to link in the actual article is the primary source (e.g., don't reference Felix- reference the study that he referenced!). - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 15:53, 2 June 2025 (UTC)
- Checked the Amkor/IBM study's link. It's not free. (Argh!) But I cited the "journal" (which was technically a conference) anyway, because it's a bit too important to leave out.
- It's technically accessible via means that are probably not appropriate to directly mention on this wiki. So, I'll leave it at this: if you happen to know... I'm gonna call it science journal black magic, you can check it out. - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 14:44, 3 June 2025 (UTC)
- As usual, I post and then I find something else lol
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_ef8bDQktI - This is the news segment that Felix had towards the beginning of his PS3 Story video- with the guys telling the hosts how poor Sony's service for them was. It's a BBC Watchdog segment.
- Note: IIRC, Felix did not want to fully attribute this section in the video because at one point in this segment, they show some guys reflowing the motherboards using a reflow oven- which of course, isn't a real fix. He didn't want to spread misinformation on how to fix the Yellow Light of Death. However, there are bits in this segment that are important to this article, so it can be used here. - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 15:00, 3 June 2025 (UTC)
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8263063.stm - Apparently, SCEE's vice president at the time wasn't too happy about Watchdog's segment, and he sent a strongly worded letter to the BBC over it- which the BBC responded to in this linked article. - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 02:12, 4 June 2025 (UTC)
- Okay- I'd say this article's in the final stretch, and the stuff about the PS3 and Xbox 360 are pretty much done, so I've linked to it from Sony and Microsoft's pages. (Subject to change.) Other than the PS3 consumer response, all that needs done from here is just Nvidia stuff (AKA, as I've come to find out: "the hard part"). I knew about the class action Nvidia got slapped with over this because of Felix's video, but it was somehow still quite annoying to find some of these refs about Nvidia's involvement, so here they are:
- https://web.archive.org/web/20101001080640/http://www.nvidiasettlement.com/index.html - Here's a page on the "Nvidia GPU Litigation" where people who wanted to take part in the settlement could get more info on it and, well, take part.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20101001080616/http://www.nvidiasettlement.com/affectedmodels.html - Affected models for the Nvidia settlement. According to this, Dell, HP, and Apple computers were also affected by this. If research proves that their responses are relevant enough, they may get their own segments in this article at some point. However, they weren't parties to this lawsuit, so it's very possible that they won't be relevant enough.
- I'm also gonna take the opportunity to clarify this to any future editors as well: from what I understand, Bumpgate was technically not entirely their fault. (If it was, why would ATI chips have the same problem?) They just ended up taking much of the blame for it because they got sued. Nonetheless, what little I currently know about their response does seem potentially relevant, hence why it's going into the article.
- As usual, will update if I find any more sources. - V (Vindicator4021) (talk) 15:14, 5 June 2025 (UTC)