PSU transient trips
ATX 2.x PSU sized to base TDPs trips OCP when CPU + GPU both spike. We flag it before you buy.
Greenfield is a board. Every part you pick connects to every other part — and Greenfield checks every connection.
ATX 2.x PSU sized to base TDPs trips OCP when CPU + GPU both spike. We flag it before you buy.
Tall RAM kit + air cooler that overhangs DIMM 1. The case closes — the cooler won't seat.
Under-spec'd board hits 90°C VRM at sustained boost. The CPU thermal-throttles silently.
Hover a chip to light up its trace; click to navigate. The map IS the navigation.
Case study
The shopkeeper said it was the same chip. Greenfield names what you actually lost.
LGA1700 · 14C/20T · 5.3 GHz · UHD 770 iGPU
LGA1700 · 14C/20T · 5.3 GHz · no iGPU
| Spec | You asked for | They offered | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cores / threads | 14C / 20T | 14C / 20T | ✓ same |
| Boost clock | 5.3 GHz | 5.3 GHz | ✓ same |
| Socket | LGA1700 | LGA1700 | ✓ same |
| Integrated graphics | Intel UHD 770 | — | × lost |
| AVX-512 | No | No | ✓ same |
| MSRP delta | Reference | ≈ −₹1,500 | — depends |
Why this works
Most chatbots will say a build is mostly compatible when there are four critical issues. Or claim a 360 mm GPU won't fit a 410 mm case.
— what we built Greenfield to stop doing.
The pipeline classifies your question, looks up real parts in the catalog, runs deterministic compat + buyer-protection checks, and only then asks the LLM to write the prose.
The model can't hallucinate specs because it never has to invent them. The numbers in the answer come from the catalog and the engine. The LLM is a wrapper, not the oracle.
How it works in detail →Greenfield runs in seconds, asks no questions, and answers like a knowledgeable friend instead of a salesperson.