- Nov 14, 2011
- 10,456
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Is that it's cheap to replace it when you kill it 
Should have guessed that messing around with OC'ing my Phenom II 960T on a crappy old AM2 motherboard with 3-and-a-bit power phases was a bad idea. The lack of any sort of manual voltage control in the BIOS was probably the biggest hint. "I'll just push the clock a little to 3.4GHz, should be safe right?" Upon booting into Windows and firing up Prime, I discover that it's pushing almost 1.6V through my CPU.
Oddly enough, it's now no longer stable at stock frequencies, even on a much nicer Asus board. As soon as the Turbo clock kicked in the entire system would just hang, even when I give it extra voltage. Sigh.
Lesson learned, and a replacement 965 from eBay is in the post... Glad I fried a 4 year old CPU, and not a brand new $1000 8 core Haswell monster.
What's the first CPU you all killed?
Should have guessed that messing around with OC'ing my Phenom II 960T on a crappy old AM2 motherboard with 3-and-a-bit power phases was a bad idea. The lack of any sort of manual voltage control in the BIOS was probably the biggest hint. "I'll just push the clock a little to 3.4GHz, should be safe right?" Upon booting into Windows and firing up Prime, I discover that it's pushing almost 1.6V through my CPU.
Lesson learned, and a replacement 965 from eBay is in the post... Glad I fried a 4 year old CPU, and not a brand new $1000 8 core Haswell monster.
What's the first CPU you all killed?
