Sapphire Radeon RX 9070 XT NITRO+ Has Also Sustained A Connector Meltdown

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The AMD RX 9070 Faced The Same Fate.

Story Highlight
  • A user has reported that their Sapphire Radeon RX 9070 XT NITRO+ graphics card is experiencing a melting connector issue.
  • The GPU in question used the 12V-2X6 connector design, which also melted in ASrock’s Taichi RX 9070 XT.
  • Four of the eight pins in the adapter were burned, pointing to unequal power distribution.

The 12V-2X6 connector design was introduced in 2025 as a new evolution in power management for graphics cards, as it easily accommodates more than 300 watts. However, so far, only two AMD board partners, namely ASRock and Sapphire, have adopted this new design over the 12VHPWR model introduced in 2023.

ASRock’s Taichi RX 9070XT model has already suffered due to this issue, with users reporting that their power supplies have melted. And now, the Sapphire GPUs have also entered the unfortunate conversation of melting connectors. 

Why it matters: A new connector design that encounters the same problems it was intended to solve is not good news for gamers and companies like AMD.

Sapphire Radeon RX 9070 XT NITRO+ Melting connector reddit
The Reddit user is showing the melted connector.

As revealed on Reddit, a user’s Sapphire Radeon RX 9070 XT NITRO+ graphics card suffered from a melting connector issue, the first ever such case reported for this variant. The user in question was powering this GPU through the blue-tipped adapter, which was connected to three 8-pin cables from a Corsair RM1000X PSU.

Four of the eight pins exhibited visible burn marks, which could indicate a larger issue of unequal power distribution in the 12V-2X6 connector.

The Sapphire Radeon RX 9070 XT NITRO+ only consumes around 360W, according to the replies on the Reddit post. Hence, this melting problem is a stain on the reputation of the 12V-2X6 connectors, which were introduced to address the power issues of the 12VHPWR connector design.

The latter of these connectors has even landed PCI-SIG in legal trouble due to the melting issue. Hence, if this eternal problem persists in the 12V-2X6 connectors, AMD and NVIDIA may need to rethink the future of this design.

What do you think about this melting connector issue? Tell us in the comments below or head to the Tech4Gamers forum for discussion.

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