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What are the side effects of Overclocking?
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Thread : What are the side effects of Overclocking?
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Profile: enthusiast
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tOpIc |
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Profile: addict
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More heat, CPU life expectancy reduced .... but you get more bang for your buck! --------------- Intel E8400/V-1 @ 3.8ghz Gigabyte P35-DS3R Patriot 4GB DDR2800 HIS 4870 512 Benq 24" FP241vw Creative X-Fi Fatality pro 2x Seagate Sata2 500gb raid0 2x Seagate 80gb sata2 LG GGC H20L Blu-Ray/HDDVD TT Toughpower 650W Antec 1200 |
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Profile: enthusiast
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I have a E8400 at 3.6 ghz with 1.18750 .It's not hot at all only 41°C max under load .How much will it's life expectancy be reduced ? |
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Profile: Forum Fixture
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What are you using to get that number? Also, what are you using to load it?
Message quoted 1 times
Message edited by Zorg on 09-25-2008 at 06:06:00 PM |
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Profile: addict
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At that speed it will only last 2 months ... Kidding --------------- Intel E8400/V-1 @ 3.8ghz Gigabyte P35-DS3R Patriot 4GB DDR2800 HIS 4870 512 Benq 24" FP241vw Creative X-Fi Fatality pro 2x Seagate Sata2 500gb raid0 2x Seagate 80gb sata2 LG GGC H20L Blu-Ray/HDDVD TT Toughpower 650W Antec 1200 |
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Stop playing with that you will go Blind!
Profile: enthusiast
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Normal lifespan of a CPU is around 10 years. When you overclock you can decreas the life of the CPU but some will last 1-2 years overclocked and some will last 10+years overclock. No one can say for sure how long that CPU will last at that speed and voltage. No one can tell you how long it would last at stock speeds. At stock it could die at 4 years or go forever.
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Profile: enthusiast
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How could I go from the king of RockN'Roll to this
Profile: old hand
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I see CPUs and MBs die from improper cooling more than anything else. |
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Profile: enthusiast
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And how about graphics cards. What are the side effects if I overclock them WITHOUT VOLTAGE CHANGE?I know more heat . But how about life expectancy? |
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Profile: stranger
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Honestly the biggest issue isn't the CPU dying completely it's unexpected errors. Functional deterioration might occur and you won't even know it until it's too late. Sometimes this means extra BSODs but sometimes it means a lot of data loss or even file system errors.
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Now that is just absolutely ludicrous
Profile: addict
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If you're not touching the voltages and keeping it cool the life expectancy won't change. In fact if you overclock and use an aftermarket cooling there's big chance that life expectancy may be increased. |
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Profile: enthusiast
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I have 2 8800 GTS 512 Oc'ed 740 core and they run very cool.Rarely go over 66 under load(2 hours of crysis) and the fan is set to minimum 40% |
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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I have a Q9550 OC'd to 3.2ghz (only 400 over) However it is running 1.41 Volts and my full load temps are 56 Celsius (37 idle)...
--------------- Gigabyte X48-DQ6 / Q9550 @ 3.4ghz (400*8.5) / VisionTek 4870x2 / 4GB Mushkin 1066MHZ (2*2) / Xigmatek HDT-S1283 / Antec TruePower Quattro 1000 Watt (Quad crossfire one day) / Samsung 22x DVDRW Lightscribe / Two 500GB Seagate 7200.11(raid 0) |
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Profile: enthusiast
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I'd say the cooling solution adds up a lot as well.
Message edited by Yuka on 09-25-2008 at 07:21:56 PM --------------- - Athlon64 X2 4400+ @2.4Ghz - DFI Lanparty UT NF4 SLI-D - 2Gb (512Mbx4) Corsair XMS 2.5-3-3-7 @440Mhz - Sapphire HD4850 @650Mhz 512MB GDDR3 @993Mhz (wasn't stable @680Mhz |
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Profile: Forum Fixture
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I'm guessing that you used Real Temp to get your temps? If so, then don't worry, it will outlive it's usefulness.
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I'm not your buddy, guy!
Profile: enthusiast
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Good cooling is a must, otherwise you'll reduce the lifespan of the CPU and possibly make it unstable. The best solution is an aftermarket cooler like the Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro (or whatever # they're up to now) which blows the heat directly out the back of the case instead of to the side. Put a nice 120mm fan on the back right behind the CPU heat sink and you've got very effective heat removal.
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