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Thread : can overclocking kill your HDD??
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Profile: newbie
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im currently in the process of trying to overclock my cpu, but i noticed after running prime95 for a few hours that my hard drive began chirping, or making some king of noise.
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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overclocking the cpu has no direct effect with the hard drive. |
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Profile: addict
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Maybe it is your PSU not supplying enough power thats causing your hdd to corrupt/break/etc. so OC can, indirectly, destroy a hdd. |
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Profile: old hand
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An unstable OC causes the computer to crash repeatedly, leading to damage to the OS and software, but not hardware damage. PSU trouble could also cause it. Both of these are rather unlikely to be your cause though, I'd look elsewhere. |
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Profile: newbie
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ok, thanks. my psu is a 800w so i doubt thats it. and right now my oc is unstable and im getting many crashes, im still working on it. |
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Profile: addict
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of course never |
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Profile: old hand
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What are the system specs and what have you done so far? |
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Nuke it, Nuke it good!
Profile: Eternal Poster
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Overclocking will not damage your hard drive, but there are 2 things that can corrupt the data on them. If you push too hard your cpu or memory can error. If it writes enough errors to the drive you will get data corruption. This is why testing is important. it should be 100% stable before using it for day to day activities. If your PCI/PCI-E frequency gets pushed to high your hard drive controller can cause data corruption. This should not happen on modern boards, but has been a problem in the past and if your board is old it could be an issue. Clicking can be caused by a bad drive, bad cable(power or data) or in rare cases a bad board. Try to plug the drive on another power connector. Message edited by nukemaster on 07-05-2008 at 09:39:31 PM ---------------
http://tinyurl.com/26uxxb - Core2 Temp Guide? http://tinyurl.com/cj3pw - VGA power use? http://tinyurl.com/5v55wk - Core2 Memory performance? http://tinyurl.com/6pmbke - SLI/Xfire? |
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Profile: member
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Chirping (some times heard as clicking) is caused when the hard drive has to re-calibrate the drive heads, it can be caused by thermal expansion (drive temperature varying a lot) or by a drive that's on it's way out.
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Meowwwww!
Profile: old hand
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Can you overclock your HDD, like if its a 5400rpm drive make it run like 10k rpm's, is that possible? |
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Profile: addict
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I suppose, if you overvolted the motor on the platter, the leads for it are exposed, it'd be easy. You'd burn that motor up real fast, though, and I'm not entirely sure the drive would actually operate at those speeds. the internal components aren't made to go that fast.
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Profile: newbie
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Meowwwww!
Profile: old hand
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