- Aug 25, 2001
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I was wondering, how wise is it, to run a PSU "until it dies", rather than replace it at warranty's end?
For example, I have a pair of Antec VP-450 PSUs, that were powering a pair of (mildly) OCed C2Q 45nm CPUs. They are probably 4 years old by now, maybe more. They only had a 2-year warranty. I had to remove the OC on the main C2Q rig, because I was getting a couple of hard-freezes while doing DC. I now theorize that could have been caused by excessive ripple, caused by dried-out / worn-out caps.
I haven't tested that theory yet, by digging out the C2Q rigs and putting in a fresh PSU and re-OCing it.
But is that a real problem, that running a PSU past it's warranty period, may cause it to run out of spec, and cause problems, or even damage hardware, in extreme cases?
Or is it "safe", to run a PSU for as long as it continues to run, regardless of warranty expiration?
For example, I have a pair of Antec VP-450 PSUs, that were powering a pair of (mildly) OCed C2Q 45nm CPUs. They are probably 4 years old by now, maybe more. They only had a 2-year warranty. I had to remove the OC on the main C2Q rig, because I was getting a couple of hard-freezes while doing DC. I now theorize that could have been caused by excessive ripple, caused by dried-out / worn-out caps.
I haven't tested that theory yet, by digging out the C2Q rigs and putting in a fresh PSU and re-OCing it.
But is that a real problem, that running a PSU past it's warranty period, may cause it to run out of spec, and cause problems, or even damage hardware, in extreme cases?
Or is it "safe", to run a PSU for as long as it continues to run, regardless of warranty expiration?