Originally posted by: ewitte
Only if you killed it from the overclock (probably voltage). If it was genuinely faulty there is nothing wrong with RMA. They expect you to overclock. Pretty much everything today is designed for it.
Sorry, but this is incorrect. Overclocking voids most warranties. Period.
The only CPUs "designed for it" are AMD's FX line and Intel's Extreme Edition line. They may have additional provisions in their warranties that allow for overvolting and overclocking. Normal CPUs do not.
Originally posted by: rahvin
Defrauding? My lord someone is feeling high and mighty. Why don't you go look down your nose at some people. I'm always astounded at people that think their moral position is superior to others without knowing the others moral position. Why don't you just wag your finger at them and tell them they are going to hell.
Uh . . . ? What was "high and mighty" about what Yoxxy said? He's mostly right, though I have no idea what percentage of RMAs are "legit". When you void the warranty, you void the warranty. No ifs, no ands, no buts. People who burn out their own hardware and ship it back for replacement wind up costing everyone else money. Those extra costs incurred by retailers and/or manufacturers get passed along to the rest of us.
Nobody in their right mind advocates, much less tolerates, bogus RMAs. Fraud is fraud.