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electronic components improve with age

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theMan

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My last build, an A64 3200+ winchester (2.0ghz), built in early 2005 has been relegated mostly to internet surfing. About a year ago, i had returned everything to stock settings (after I had been running it at 2.7ghz for the years before that). Anyways, the other day, i decided I wanted to overclock this thing a little, just for old times sake. I decided just to do a pretty mild overclock of 2400mhz from 2000mhz. (this was an amazing chip). Anyway, i quickly decided to screw that, and see how high this baby could go. after cleaning the 20lbs of dust out of the case and heatsink (thermalright xp90), I was ready to go (didn't re-seat the hsf or anything).

with my previous overclock, back in 2005, i was able to get 2700mhz, prime95 stable for 12 hours. so this time, i carefully pushed it to 2700mhz, with a vcore of 1.525. prime stable for 12 hours once again, temps around 45C load. I pushed up the fsb frequency higher, 2800. prime stable for 12 hours again, still with 1.525V. then 2850. prime stable 12 hours. finally I pushed it to 2.9ghz, fails p95 after 30 mins. up the vcore to 1.55V, 12hours stable. this is amazing. 2.9ghz on an A64 3200+ with only 1.55V on air...

this just makes me wonder, did my components age like a fine wine? how was I able to squeeze so much more out of the chip than I could 4.5 years ago? anyway, it was great fun. right now, i'm stuck on a laptop for school, and i've really missed overclocking and tinkering. it just goes to show you don't need the latest and greatest to have a bit of fun with a pc.

🙂
 
i can't believe how out of the loop i am. X2's were in 2005? holy crap, i remember when those things coming out like it was yesterday. right now its all this Core this Core that i don't know what the hell is going on.... i feel old.
 
its ok im stuck on an opteron 170 which sits between the 3800 and 4400.

i shouuld try ocing again. i found my stable settings in may 2006 during finals and i havent changed them since...

i think components do get better over time though.

i OCed my athlon 1100 system like 3 years after i first did it and I seemed to get a lot better results... maybe my technique was better but i swear my results were far more impressive the 2nd time.
 
Originally posted by: AznAnarchy99
I should try that with my x2 3800. I've had it running at 2.6ghz since i got it in '05.

For my constantly running o/c's, I've generally had to reduce speeds over time if anything, as instability often creeps in.

Could be lack of o/c skillz, but in any case its probably my general trend.
 
Originally posted by: theman
i can't believe how out of the loop i am. X2's were in 2005? holy crap, i remember when those things coming out like it was yesterday. right now its all this Core this Core that i don't know what the hell is going on.... i feel old.

X2's were a good value, considering how long (relatively speaking) they've held up so well. Still using a X2 4000+, the only thing that hasn't been able to run well on my PC is GTA4. Everything else runs pretty smoothly.
 
Everything I've heard about Athon A64s and X2s were that they degraded over time (especially the single-core folks; a lot of them were having to drop back on their overclocks three-four years later). Maybe this is a temp thing?
 
All semiconductor devices degrade over time due to effects such as electromigration, hot carrier injection, NBTI, and other effects. Theoretically it would take years for these effects to have a measurable impact on performance, although overclocking would obviously speed this up.
 
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