I haven't had problems with anything that has survived half an hour of Aida64 stress-test and Prime95.
It isn't necessarily your OC that's the problem, it could be a software error, or worse you could have damaged your hardware with excessive stress testing. 36 hours of full-load can damage your hardware.
Many people say you need to stress up to 24 hrs for maximum stability. Their rationale is if it can handle prime95 for that long it can handle anything :hmm: Not sure if thats overkill.
Overclocking also introduces this strange notion of stability how stable is your overclock? The word stable means different things to different people, but the basic assumption is that the system should be stable for everything you do. Intel and AMD ship their CPUs at a voltage and frequency which keeps them stable no matter the situation. Some users attempt to match that stability by stress testing their system, whereas others are satisfied for a gaming stability with no need for transcoding video stability. Testing the stability of a system typically requires some form of stress test, and again users will select a test that either emulates real world (video transcoding, PCMark8, 3DMark) or attempt to find any small weakness (Prime95, XTU). The downside of this latter testing philosophy is that a bad stress test has the potential to break a system. Personally, I shudder when a user suggests a system is not stable unless it passes 72hr Large FFT Prime95, because I have seen users irreparably damage their CPUs with it.
My stress tests here at AnandTech typically consist of a run of the benchmark PovRay (3 minutes, probes CPU and memory) and a test using OCCT (5 minutes, probes mainly CPU). If there is weakness in the memory controller, PovRay tends to find it, whereas if the CPU has not enough voltage for video transcoding, OCCT will throw up an error. There are outlier circumstances where these tests are not enough for 100% stability, but when my systems are stable with these tests, they tend to devour any gaming or non-AVX transcoding for breakfast.
36 hours of full-load can damage your hardware.
Personally, I shudder when a user suggests a system is not stable unless it passes ‘72hr Large FFT Prime95’, because I have seen users irreparably damage their CPUs with it.
That's complete horse(patooie).
As long as you don't push your volts and temps too high (beyond "safe" levels), you won't damage anything.
Us DC'ers run our CPUs months at a time, sometimes years with loads equivalent to Prime95 loads, and it doesn't harm our CPUs one bit.
You can't.
You can't.
No one else uses IntelBurnTest? Once I read that it was similar to the tests Intel uses to verify stability, I was convinced. I never run it for very long since the temps it hits are ridiculous, well above the maximums I ever encounter otherwise.
If you're really a glutton for punishment, run it at the same time as FurMark. If your system survives 5-10 mins of that without melting, it's probably stable.
LOL, only 36 hours? 🙄or worse you could have damaged your hardware with excessive stress testing. 36 hours of full-load can damage your hardware.
Perhaps this is the reason I have not had a BSOD on my i7 920! It does not run "light loads". It has been running hard full load stress testing for 44,520 hours straight (except for update restarts and the rare power outage). Temps have been 72-85*C for all those hours.It's the light load hitting of the CPU that causes it. Enough load to ramp the clock but not enough to ramp the vcore.
running crazy loads for hours seems stupid to me. every crash I have ever had after my oc was stable under a 20-30 minutes of stress testing has happened at idle. so what good would non stop load testing do? in every case I have had to go back and set my voltage to auto setting and I will never crash again. I just seem to have the strangest luck with any adaptive or manual core voltage.
That's why I dislike adaptive Vcore overclocks. Call me old-fashioned, but I tend to stick with fixed Vcore OCs.Right , with a heavy load the voltage stays pretty stable but with normal use you have the transition from idle to mid load were it can be a issue.