Broken pin on the cpu.

bennyv

Junior Member
Aug 4, 2004
14
0
0
my brother accidently broke a pin on his new 3.0 cpu..i inserted the cpu to the slot without the pin, and the computer seems to work allright..i ran some benchmarks, and everything really seems to be ok.. do we have to be worried about something? they wont replace the cpu, as the warrany does not apply on broken pins.
 

thelanx

Diamond Member
Jul 3, 2000
3,299
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0
Some pins aren't really used for anything important, while others are (i/o etc.). Your brother might have just broken a nonessential pin. Count yourself lucky. Course, maybe the pin isn't so nonessential. I would be careful and test everything out. Best situation is to replace the cpu to be sure.
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
81
It could be a power-pin, and not totally necessary. I'd say do a few toroture tests on the system. If it's prime-sable, seti-stable, plays games, encodes videos, etc, it's almost certainly fine.
 

OMG1Penguin

Senior member
Jul 25, 2004
659
0
0
Maybe it was the mind control pin.

Do your thoughts seem clearly devoid of fan-boy-esque thoughts?

Do the voltages seem all right?
 

jjungman

Member
Aug 27, 2004
70
0
0
I also now have a CPU with a broken pin. I haven't tried to boot up with it yet, but assuming it doesn't boot, what are my options? Can the pins somehow be fixed?
 

FullRoast

Senior member
Oct 11, 1999
337
0
0
If it is an Intel CPU, you can look at the datasheet from the Intel website to see what the pin is. A lot of them are voltage pins and a broken one would not cause a problem. Here's a link for the 90nm P4's.
 

Zap

Elite Member
Oct 13, 1999
22,377
7
81
Some pins are indeed not used. As FullRoast said, check out the datasheet and find out what exactly that pin does. BTW, I've intentionally broken off pins to make CPUs do neat stuff.