Definitely will want to see photos. It sounds like there could be something stuck between heatsink and PCB causing the warp
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Didnt find anything stuck. Was thinking of maybe some paper washers to lift the left so i can crank down on the right or something. But i was expecting that metal ring to help with that.
This is an instance where exercising eBay's great buyer protections is warranted. The card is outside of what I'd consider fully functional since it overheats due to a defect. If it was advertised this way that's one thing, but if not return it and get a fully functional card from an honest seller.
It is just basically a fiberglass panel. It has to get super hot for this to happen or the board is just made like junk. The only times I really see warping is when removing a bunch of stuff with a solder pot or heat gun, and I don't care about the board.
The GPU chip is super critical for full contact with the heatsink. The cooling mating surface of the package is the back side of the actual silicon die. It isn't in a carrier or thermal package that can average temperatures across the surface. The cooling element is basically sitting on the transistors of each circuit block. This means a lack of cooling over any specific circuit block can burn out the transistors in this region.
You're also likely getting bad performance with that much heat due to bleed over in adjacent nodes skewing results.
Your biggest secondary danger is with (technically any but mostly larger) multi layer ceramic capacitors. MLC's can short circuit due to flexing forces. The modern high capacity variety have extremely closely spaced plates inside that are only separated by a thin coating of ceramic. It only takes a microscopic fracture for these internal plates to offset and short circuit. This can be smaller than the unaided eye can see. It isn't hard to find them based on temperature and continuity.
In the end, it is just a fiberglass panel. There is nothing magic about it. If you have the fab skills, there is an easy/ugly solution to be had if you just get creative about it.
Regardless of the bend die contact is most important here. I’d try some thin plastic washers to give you better clamping force on the die, and maybe use a thermal pad instead of paste