Desperate gamer bakes dying GTX 1080 in an oven to fix it and it actually works

A PC gamer, trying to fix their aging graphics card, did something unusual: they baked it in an oven! Surprisingly, the technique worked, completely restoring their eight-year-old Gigabyte GTX 1080.

A Reddit user recently shared an incredible story about their graphics card. After it began displaying visual glitches and frequently crashing, they attempted several fixes. They started with common troubleshooting steps like reapplying thermal paste, replacing the cooling pads, and reinstalling the drivers.

After trying everything else, they took the graphics card apart, removing all the plastic, and placed it on aluminum foil. They then baked it in their home oven at 190°C (later revised to 210-220°C) for ten minutes, let it cool, and hoped for the best. Surprisingly, the card worked perfectly after the unusual repair attempt.

The real science and risks behind the oven trick

A popular belief among PC users is that ‘baking’ a graphics card repairs broken connections by reflowing the solder. However, technology professionals say this isn’t accurate, even at high temperatures.

Today’s electronic parts are made using solder that doesn’t contain lead. This type of solder needs to be heated to over 215°C to melt correctly. Although setting an oven to 220°C might seem close, a regular kitchen oven can’t maintain the exact and controlled heat needed to properly melt the solder without potentially damaging the components.

This technique works because materials expand when heated. Graphics cards often fail due to tiny cracks forming in the internal connections within the GPU chip, and this is usually caused by repeated heating and cooling.

No, GTX 1080, you will not die today.
byu/WilczeQSS inpcmasterrace

The high heat from the oven makes the parts inside the chip expand and bend. This briefly pushes the broken connections inside back together, temporarily restoring power to the circuits.

The ‘oven trick’ is only a quick fix for broken hardware because it simply forces damaged parts to reconnect. Once the device heats up and cools down normally with use – like during gaming – those connections will likely fail again.

Other users pointed out the health dangers as well. Heating electronic components can release harmful chemicals and fumes into the air, especially in a small space.

The gamer quickly updated their post to say they were thoroughly cleaning their oven before cooking with it again.

If you’re interested in more GPU news, you might like the story about a cat who saved its owner when their NVIDIA RTX 4090 overheated.

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2026-04-18 20:21