
As you can see above, the liquid metal now essentially hugs the thermal paste on the substrate, with two more lanes of it blocking the metal from ever coming out. There are cutouts in the application to ensure breathability and facilitate thermal expansion when the GPU is actually running. Apart from the thermal paste application, the liquid metal itself behaves a bit differently on this card, too.
Der8auer put the compound in an SEM for material analysis to find silicon oil mixed with the metal, likely to make mass application easier. The findings aren't conclusive, but Asus seems to have used some printing technique to form liquid metal droplets, which were then mixed with silicon, so factories could have an easier time consistently replicating the TIM spread.
Apart from these under-the-hood cooling changes, the rest of the card is identical to its sample version, which is to say: very over the top. The GPU pulled almost 800W in FurMark with the fans spinning slightly slower than before. The temps remained lower, too, but that could have to do with the card's orientation on the test bench.
The video includes a lot of other interesting tidbits, such as a tease for a wired version of the WireView Pro, allowing the tool to be usable with any graphics card. Asus also shipped a few BTF (back connect) to 12V-2×6 adapters to der8auer, which he used for testing this card. The modder also appreciated the fact that these GPUs were recalled to fix a complaint; a costly effort, but one that's probably expected when $4,000 is on the line.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/asus-revised-the-liquid-metal-application-on-its-usd4-000-rog-matrix-rtx-5090-cards-der8auer-says-retail-versions-come-with-much-more-professional-spread#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com
- Upgrade your gaming PC with an RTX 5060 for just $259.99 and instantly pocket $50 in savings
- NVIDIA BlueField-Powered Cybersecurity and Acceleration Arrive on NVIDIA Enterprise AI Factory Validated Design
- NVIDIA Unveils Multi-Agent Intelligent Warehouse and Catalog Enrichment AI Blueprints to Power the Retail Pipeline
- AI Copilot Keeps Berkeley’s X-Ray Particle Accelerator on Track
- Keyboard giant Keychron unveils new Nape Pro trackball with programmable buttons — low profile design promotes ergonomic scrolling without leaving your keyboard
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.