Intel partner offers refund for faulty Core i9-14900K CPU due to lack of stock — affected user sells off Intel hardware and switches to AMD

Raptor Lake CPU
Raptor Lake CPU (Image credit: Intel)

According to a report from HKEPC, an Intel distribution partner in Hong Kong is arranging refunds instead of replacing failed Core i9-14900K processors. The retailer does not seem to have enough CPUs in stock.

Mr. Chen, an HKEPC reader, reportedly applied for an Intel Core i9-14900K replacement on September 4, 2024, being mentally ready to wait four to five weeks for a replacement. However, on September 10, Synnex, an Intel distributor, contacted him, asking for his bank account details to arrange a refund for the faulty CPU. Mr. Chen reportedly sold his remaining Intel hardware to a friend, only kept his SSD, and planned to switch to AMD, specifically the Ryzen 9 9950X.

This report could partly confirm an earlier report that Intel was allegedly running out of Raptor Lake processors to replace faulty units. However, this does not mean that this happens everywhere and that the company is trying to avoid RMA (Return Merchandise Authorization) obligations. In Hong Kong, one of Intel's partners seems to prefer refunding to replacement.

Intel has responded to concerns about shortages of replacement CPUs for its Core i9-13900K and Core i9-14900K processors. The company confirmed that stock for RMA requests for these desktop processors is sufficient. Still, if a customer wants a refund, not a replacement, Intel is also willing to do so.

In July, Intel revealed that some of its 13th and 14th Generation Core 'Raptor Lake' processors — both mainstream units with a 65W processor base power and high-end models with a 125W PBP — could become unstable or permanently damaged due to excessive voltage. Though a BIOS update can prevent further problems for unaffected units, damaged processors require physical replacement, which Intel is actively working to facilitate.

To ensure that all customers got the proper CPUs, Intel recently extended the warranty for its 13th and 14th Generation Core 'Raptor Lake' processors for an additional two years, giving the company ample time to address any defective units. However, in some cases, users have to wait for replacements for weeks.

While this extended warranty provides reassurance, the potential delay of three to four weeks for replacements is frustrating for many users, especially those who rely on their desktop PCs for gaming and work.

Anton Shilov
Contributing Writer

Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

  • YSCCC
    It is hilarious when some defends intel degradation isn't that bad and yet the verified and accepted RMAs already ran intel out of replacement chips 1 year after release, not to say the extended 5 years warranty
    Reply
  • ThomasKinsley
    YSCCC said:
    It is hilarious when some defends intel degradation isn't that bad and yet the verified and accepted RMAs already ran intel out of replacement chips 1 year after release, not to say the extended 5 years warranty
    I'm still worried about a 14700 locked chip that someone I know just purchased from an OEM. What happens if it fails in year 4? Try reminding them that there's a known bug 4 years from now and that they have to honor it.
    Reply
  • Amdlova
    Isn't bad...

    Bad is the guy with a motherboard catching dust
    Reply
  • CaptRiker
    SOOOO glad when I built my 1st new system in 7 years last november I switched to AMD after 40 years of intel systems.. didn't want a space heater called 14900k in my small computer room.. my new Amd 7950x3d is AMAZBALLS. cpu on a 360mm AIO never goes above 75c. heck my pci 5 ssd even w/thermal pad and heatsink can hit 70c easy.



    -----------------------------------
    Fractal Design Meshify 2 RGB Black TG
    AMD 7950x3d CPU (16c/32t) (pbo)
    64 gigs ddr5-6000 CL30 Corsair Vengeance RGB Memory (expo)
    Asus ProArt X670E-Creator Motherboard
    (2.5+10gb Ethernet ports, 2x USB4 ports)
    4tb Crucial T700 Gen5 ssd (12.4GB/sec read, 11.8GB/sec write) - Boot
    4tb Samsung 990 Pro Gen4 ssd (7.4GB/sec read, 6.9GB/sec write) - Data
    Gigabyte RTX 4080 GAMING OC 16G Graphics Card
    Corsair H150i Elite Capellix XT 360mm AF120-RGB Water Cooler
    1000watt CORSAIR HX Series HX1000i ATX 3.0
    Windows 11 Home (23h2)
    -----------------------------------
    Reply
  • CelicaGT
    Interestingly my Dell G15 LAPTOP with a 13900HX just received a BIOS update 3 days ago to "Address Intel CPU stability issues". No details beyond that. Methinks there's still more going on than has been stated.
    Reply
  • Amdlova
    CelicaGT said:
    Interestingly my Dell G15 LAPTOP with a 13900HX just received a BIOS update 3 days ago to "Address Intel CPU stability issues". No details beyond that. Methinks there's still more going on than has been stated.

    I have updated my board with this new intel meldown update... only drawback I see the motherboard make more noise because how they operate the c1 c3 and c6... but power and benchark still the same.
    Reply
  • CelicaGT
    Amdlova said:
    I have updated my board with this new intel meldown update... only drawback I see the motherboard make more noise because how they operate the c1 c3 and c6... but power and benchark still the same.
    Ya, I actually saw an uptick in Cinebench R23 single core, well outside margin of error. Anyway, my surprise was that this is a laptop, the mobile versions are not supposed to be affected. Granted this may be a Dell only thing where they are implementing the "official" recommended Intel settings and nothing more. Voltages did spike past 1.5V from time to time before, now it seems to be capped at 1.466V. Still gets bloody hot though, who thought jamming a full fat i9 into a laptop was a good idea anyway? I only bought it because it was cheaper to get 32GB RAM and an i9 over 16GB RAM and an i7. One of those odd Dell sales.
    Reply
  • watzupken
    It is not fine to just refund for the CPU because it leaves you with an Intel motherboard that you may not want to reuse. In fact due to the change in socket, you can’t even buy an Arrow Lake as replacement.
    Reply
  • Amdlova
    watzupken said:
    It is not fine to just refund for the CPU because it leaves you with an Intel motherboard that you may not want to reuse. In fact due to the change in socket, you can’t even buy an Arrow Lake as replacement

    You can buy a 13500T as low 143us on ebay to build a HTPC and get a 7700x3d with the money :)
    Reply
  • YSCCC
    ThomasKinsley said:
    I'm still worried about a 14700 locked chip that someone I know just purchased from an OEM. What happens if it fails in year 4? Try reminding them that there's a known bug 4 years from now and that they have to honor it.
    Good luck have any success on it... those OEM denial loop was when I tried my first PC build and overclocking my first AMD Athlon chip at the age of 12, that's what my long saved up pocket money can get....

    And back to the topic, as there are literally millions of 13th and 14th gen with a ticking timebomb and their 5 years extended warranty... the stamp on "intel being unreliable" will stay for quite some time, IMO this is epic example of one can lose on performance, but never lose on reliability and reputation. Performance catch up in 2-3 gen usually isn't that difficult but losing reputation is deadly.

    And I wonder they are facing all those 2 generation of ticking CPU issues and running out of replacement chips right now, 2 months after they admitted the issue and offer extended warranty, do they basically do a recall and refund in the form of RMA refund, or they will ramp up production of new raptor lake chips just to meet the replacement demand..... maybe making the RPL series having "the longest production cycle in modern CPU"
    Reply