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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Mark Tyson

Overclocker sold a die-less Core i9-14900K in China — product suffered from serious silicon deficiency

Safedisk finds a 14900K with no silicon.

One of the world’s leading overclockers has fallen victim to a Chinese CPU scammer. Hong Kong’s HKEPC shares the sorry tale of overclocker Safedisk, who bought a non-retail packaged Intel Core i9-14900K, which was stone dead. To investigate the issue with the chip, the South Korean OC champion - ranked third worldwide - delidded the CPU to find it was seriously silicon deficient. There was just an empty space under the IHS where the CPU die was supposed to be.

According to HKEPC’s retelling of the Safedisk 14900K swindle, The Korean overclocker acquired a ‘loose chip’ or ‘bulk pack’ Intel Core i9-14900K from a mainland China dealer. We are sure Safedisk isn’t short of CPU samples, but perhaps his curiosity was aroused by the pricing, packaging, or product description.

With the chip in hand, things looked pretty suspicious from the start. According to the machine translation of the HKEPC post, the CPU arrived in a blister pack with a sticker signaling that the warranty would be void if the pack were opened... That’s a message that doesn’t demonstrate a lot of confidence in a product and is surely not Intel’s official policy.

Installing the CPU resulted in a no-boot situation. We are sure Safedisk wasn’t surprised at this point. Perhaps such an experienced overclocker may have even been able to tell the silicon was missing from the chip weight.

(Image credit: Safedisk / HKEPC)

Faced with such a resolutely dead CPU, which looked pretty normal from the outside, Safedisk decided to physically check under the hood. A moment or two with a delidding tool revealed a big surprise. Where the silicon die usually resides, affixed to the green substrate under the prized-off IHS, there was a vacant space. This isn't how the silicon lottery is supposed to work.

We have published several reports outlining dodgy dealings by electronics retailers and/or online marketplaces, very often in China. Buyers really have to beware of spending their hard-earned cash on offers from sellers with no reputation, no retail store presence, or simply hawking things that seem too good to be true. Count this as another warning, and, of course, scammers live and do their dastardly deeds worldwide - not just in China.

Lastly, we hope Safedisk didn’t feel too stung and didn’t lose much money from this recent 14900K retail experience.

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