Originally posted by: RobCur
they just unbent it with their fingers, and slap reburbish on it
Never unbend pins with your fingers if you can help it.
A good tip I was once given: Use an automatic pencil (Pentel quick-clickers seem well suited for this).
Remove the lead from the pencil, and use the .5mm or .7mm pipe at the tip of the pencil.
Placing it over a bent pin, and using gentle pressure should allow you to return the pin to its normal
position with less risk of breaking it.
Shabby:"Damnit this cpu doesnt overclock well, oh well i'll just return it to newegg"
Exactly, I have a mobile Athlon XP 2400+ that outperform as expected, but I kept because I really didn't
need it to overclock in the first place. So I didn't try to return it to Newegg in return for one
that might reach 2.2GHz on air. If I had, it would probably have ended up on the refurb pile,
because there was really nothing wrong with it running at stock speed.
(as an aside: I am running it with a higher FSB, but a lower than standard multiplier).
"Refurb" can also refer to the act of checking the CPU for remarking, bent pins, scorch marks, and plugging
it into a test machine to make sure it will boot up and run within its initial specs. Testing is an important
part of the refurb process.