Originally posted by: genec57
I would love to see something definitive on the subject. There is sooooo much either way. So heavy oc cuts down on life expectancy from 10 years to 7 years - no big deal. To one year - big deal. there is so much unsupported opinion all over the forums that i really wonder if anyone really knows.
Personally, I try to keep my quad under 1.55 vCore and 70c. If I could see evidence that this would likely destroy my chip within three years I might reconsider.
What I do see a lot of is posts from oc'ers who say that they have never had a chip failure, regardless.
From all you guys who make the claims either way I would love to see some quantifiable evidence. Anyone????
there is *nothing definitive* on the subject
-OCing is a gamble ... extreme OCing is an exponentially bigger gamble
--you pay your money and you take your chances .. some chips seem to last forever; other die very quickly
---i would never OC if i couldn't stand to lose my CPU. i don't OC expensive CPUs ... kinda defeats the "purpose" ... otoh, if i kill my $114 e4300 ... i replace it without a tear ... i expect to buy penryn next year anyway.
----What we know:
FACT: heat kills your CPU
--the cooler you keep it the better
FACT: Overvolting shortens CPU life [generally] exponentially faster than simple OC'ing without it
--So, the less overvoltage to reach your OC, the better
FACT: Even a simple OC speeds electromigration
-most of us find this no problem if temps are also kept low
we DID discuss this years ago with
PM - an elite member who really knew his stuff working as a CPU engineer for intel and he really did know about OC'ing. Unfortunately this info's details are hidden in my brain and in bookmarks from probably 4 years ago.