Wolfdale, 1.48V and not going "pop" - possible?

dkm777

Senior member
Nov 21, 2010
528
0
0
I come with a question of curiosity. Some guy claims (actually I think he's trolling) that he's been running two E8500s at around 4.5GHz with a Vcore=1.48V for two years without problems. Is this actually possible? Wouldn't a Vcore that high kill a 45nm chip rather quickly?
 

killster1

Banned
Mar 15, 2007
6,205
475
126
If you cool it good enough its fine. i have e8500 @4.8ghz for 2 + years as well why do you care?
 

smakme7757

Golden Member
Nov 20, 2010
1,487
1
81
I used 1.70v to get my E8400 to 4.7Ghz. I would say it could handle it under water!
 

aigomorla

CPU, Cases&Cooling Mod PC Gaming Mod Elite Member
Super Moderator
Sep 28, 2005
21,131
3,667
126
killed an E8500 with 1.55Vcore underload for a full 2 weeks! :D
 

john3850

Golden Member
Oct 19, 2002
1,436
21
81
With water at 1.46v the bottom of my chips got slightly discolered around the hot spots.
If your going to do stuff like distributed computing I would say its bad idea.
It all depends on your load.
 

dkm777

Senior member
Nov 21, 2010
528
0
0
Hmm, since I do distributed computing myself I kinda assumed that guy also runs his PC for many hours a day when me might actually just turn it on for a couple of hours to play some games.
Now I got another question - how conservative are Intel's specs as far as voltages are concerned? They say 1.36V max for Wolfdale/Yorkfield and I tend to stick with them. But still, I'm just itching to push my E8400 over 4GHz just to see how it goes and it won't do 4GHz with 1.36V, but 1.38V is fine (for short term; was afraid to do a full 12hr prime test).