don't know what your problem is,
Actually the problem is yours, you don't miss a chance to post your "problem" with TBS6925 in every forum you are member, satellites.co.uk, dxtv.de, here, who knows where else. It has become an obsession...
you don't seem to get it after all, if the card draws more power than the standard says the PCI-E slot will get burned and i don't think Asus or any serious manufacturer would not design their PCI-E slots to specs, all their boards are fully tested by PCI-SIG to ensure they live up to electrical specifications.
Please, do your homework first, there was a bunch of Asus motherboards with a chipset made by Nvidia around 2005 that did burn when used with Skystar 2s, and it was Asus's fault. Some horror stories to prove my point...
_http://www.dvbviewer.tv/forum/topic/7761-skystar2-and-a8n-sli-deluxe/
_http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=3188
_http://www.avforums.com/forums/sky-sky/282908-skystar-2-not-compatible-nvidia-chipset.html
_http://www.hardwareanalysis.com/content/topic/38623/?o=1860
_http://www.satellites.co.uk/forums/satellite-pc-card-receivers-internet-satellite/61572-skystar2.html
In the case which you state that Asus burned the slot seems to source to that the Skystar2 cards aren't built either to specs, this problem could have been avoided with a external power connector as security, you understand? but Skystar2 took the cheap route and avoided external connector, don't blame Asus for some cheap chinese card burning the PCI-E slot.
So it was Skystar 2's fault that those motherboards burned, and not Asus's? So why other motherboards with the same chipset didn't get burned? It is obvious here where to put the blame, but you just deny it...
Only TBS knows the answer but they won't say.
Yep, there is a big conspiracy here...