Technical Bugs
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When you speed up a CPU beyond its capacity it will require more power, in turn more heat, its unavoidable, best you can do is use better cooling
I know, I stated that in my post ;), but I can’t increase my power that’s the problem, I have ample cooling, and my CPU has to be manually overclocked.
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You need to up your VCore most likely.
If you can flash your BIOS so you can change the VCore enough to make the system stable then you should be ok (if it doesn’t overheat and kill your cpu). If you can’t adjust your voltage in your BIOS even after flashing the new version… then you need to back off of the overclock.
Your concerns about your hardware is one of the risks overclockers take. Personally I wouldn’t up the VCore much. Some combos require less voltage than others (and it varies from component to component… even same components), this is why noone really knows what the safe thing to do. There are alot of variables here.
If you are already having POST or 48hr burnin issues then I’d personally recommend backing off of the overclock a bit. Thats just me… shrugs its your money.
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I’ll just say this: when you are overclocking your main computer, it’s alright as long as you don’t touch the voltage. If you do that and you do NOT have another computer to fall back to in case of problems, I say the risk is not worth the gain.
I’ll also remind you of the classic: backup, backup, backup. I’ve just had to reformat my whole HDD, but since I’m now a backup freak I haven’t lost a single thing (daily backups in three or four different places, both offline, online and remote).
Finally, after you make any change, run the Torture Test of Prime95 for about 24 hours straight. If you get through that, you’re likely safe for short-term consequences. Just always have in mind that any voltage increase will also decrease your processor’s useful life.
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lol, thanks dad
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PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE! PIE!
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points to my own signature ^^