Two months ago, Asus announced the ROG Equalizer, a power cable for certain Nvidia RTX graphics cards designed to banish the fear of melting connectors once and for all. Well, perhaps not completely so, because it seems we now have the first case of a melted ROG Equalizer cable.As posted on ChipHell and reported by Uniko’s Hardware on X (via Videocardz), there’s admittedly very little information to go on, other than a crystal-clear picture of a seriously fried connector at the end of an Asus ROG Equalizer cable. Three of the six power pins look properly scorched, with one showing a considerable degree of melting in the plastic housing.😭😭😭😭😭😭asus rog equalizer (17a)chiphellhttps://t.co/rMR9DWWQmh pic.twitter.com/anh2M3Mgr4June 12, 2026However, there’s no indication as to what PSU and graphics card this cable was plugged into, nor the circumstances as to how the melty-melty all came about, so the one thing we can’t do right now is point our fingers at Asus and go ‘Ha! Your cable is rubbish!’ Well, we can, but we just can’t use this solitary picture as evidence for such a judgment. If you’re unaware of what all the hoohar is about Nvidia’s 12VHPWR (and the subsequent 12V-2×6 design update) connector, let me give you a quick explainer. In order to have its graphics card use gopping great globs of power but also not require lots of big connectors on the card’s PCB, Nvidia designed a compact system to be used instead of the traditional 8-pin PCIe system.A precursor to 12VHPWR first…