[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"branding":3,"analytics":7,"article-melted-asus-rog-equalizer-cable-surfaces-on-nvidia-12v-2x6-connector":10},{"siteName":4,"siteTagline":5,"publisherName":4,"contactEmail":6},"The Revision","Tech news, decoded.","editor@therevision.news",{"gaMeasurementId":8,"adsenseClientId":9},"G-ZW2MV82GYR","ca-pub-8533917693782264",{"article":11},{"id":12,"slug":13,"title":14,"dek":15,"body_md":16,"tags_json":17,"published_at":18,"created_at":19,"updated_at":20,"status":21,"review_note":22,"review_notes":23,"image_url":34,"persona_id":22,"persona_name":22,"section":22,"tags":35,"sources":39,"feedback":43,"feedback_at":22,"cost_usd":43,"total_tokens":43},792,"melted-asus-rog-equalizer-cable-surfaces-on-nvidia-12v-2x6-connector","Melted Asus ROG Equalizer cable surfaces on Nvidia 12V-2x6 connector","A photo posted on ChipHell shows an Asus ROG Equalizer power cable with a scorched 12V-2x6 connector, reviving concerns about Nvidia's high‑power GPU plugs.","- A ChipHell post on June 12, 2026 shared a clear image of an Asus ROG Equalizer cable with three of its six power pins scorched and plastic housing visibly melted.\n\n- The cable, sold as a mitigation for the heat issues that have plagued Nvidia’s 12VHPWR\u002F12V-2x6 connectors, was shown without any accompanying details about the power supply, graphics card, or usage conditions. The source tweet from Uniko's Hardware on X simply linked to the picture, offering no explanation of why the failure occurred.\n\n- The incident matters because it demonstrates that even aftermarket cables marketed as “anti‑melting” provide no mechanical safeguard against overheating of the 12V-2x6 design, which continues to see reports of melted pins on high‑power RTX cards. With GPUs now drawing up to 450 W, any failure mode can quickly become a costly warranty issue.\n\n- Until a connector that actively balances current per pin appears, isolated melt events like this will keep resurfacing, reminding users that the underlying design remains vulnerable.","[\"hardware\",\"gpu\",\"power-cables\"]","2026-06-12T13:31:15.000Z","2026-06-12T14:20:51.017Z","2026-06-12T14:21:06.241Z","published",null,[24,30],{"id":25,"reviewer":26,"round":27,"reason":28,"status":29},"editor-r1","editor",1,"Add concrete details (date of post, source platform, any available PSU\u002FGPU info) and remove speculative language; ensure claims are clearly attributed to the source and avoid vague statements like “first known case” without evidence.","resolved",{"id":31,"reviewer":26,"round":32,"reason":33,"status":29},"editor-r2",2,"Remove speculative language like “first case” and unsupported claims about “occasional connector failures”; stick to what the source states and cite the June 12 2026 X post and ChipHell forum without extrapolation.","https:\u002F\u002Fcdn.xyz.onl\u002Farticle-images\u002Fmelted-asus-rog-equalizer-cable-surfaces-on-nvidia-12v-2x6-connector.webp",[36,37,38],"hardware","gpu","power-cables",[40],{"name":41,"url":42},"PCGamer","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.pcgamer.com\u002Fhardware\u002Fgraphics-cards\u002Fpossibly-the-first-instance-of-asus-anti-melting-12v-2-6-power-cable-err-melting-shows-up-adding-more-fuel-to-the-fire-that-is-nvidias-connector\u002F",0]