Originally posted by: avi85
Originally posted by: Kakumba
any component being overvolted will have accelerated electromigration, but as has been said, it really is a minor issue. chances are you will have upgraded at least twice before it becomes an issue....
Chances are that I will have not have upgraded since then since I am only now upgrading my P3 733 (don't laugh, it has served me well!!!) so I seriously need to know what kind of lifespan difference I'm looking at.
That's a pretty bold statement when nobody mentioned any particular # of years to expect.
There are people out there still running Celeron 300 @ 550, so pay close attention to the following and don't guess:
Use only as much voltage as necessary. Note the curve, relationship between voltage and stable speed, and when you start to see that curve rise and you need a much higher voltage to keep increasing the speed, resist the urge to do that.
Keep the parts cool. Use high quality synthetic base thermal compound, and plenty of air circulation around the motherboard (not above it, ON it... rear chassis exhaust fan does not prove effective unless you make your own custom duct and I mean far more elaborate and custom than those by Dell/etc, as they still concentrate airflow a couple inches above the board surface.
The prior paragraph goes to the notion that any CPU o'c significant enouogh to degrade the part lifespan to only single-digit # of years, will be wearing out the motherboard before that happens. Aggressive overclockers will tend to have voltage regulator epoxy breakdown or capacitor failure long before the CPU goes (again, assuming adequate cooling on the CPU).
As for adequate cooling, the cooler the CPU the lower the voltage needed to attain any given clock speed. Sometimes motherboard adjustments are not in fine enough increments that one can take this literally, linearly, but it does all start with keeping the temps low on a few key parts, including but not limited to the CPU itself.
Memory can be seen in a similar context, you can o'c it fine and expect many years out of it, unless your o'c requires excessively high voltage and you don't adequately cool it.