Maybe I've broken some kind of record here.
I have an AMD Phenom X4 9850 BE, it was running at about 75C load. I understood these to be hot chips, so no biggy. I didn't come across any stability issues and everything was working fine. I've had this system on 24x7 for 5-6 months now, running plenty of virtual machines for testing/learning etc. I only touched the BIOS when I initially setup the machine.
I have an ASRock A780FullDisplayPort motherboard. When the CPU is set to auto frequency/voltage you can't actually tell what voltage is going into your chip and NB, it simply doesn't show the stats on the screen - it's only when you set the option to Manual that it shows the current voltage.
So, I decided to see what the cause of these high temps were. I found that the board was auto-detecting a voltage of 1.55V and shoving that through my Phenom
AMD recommend 1.05V-1.3V. Even worse (can it be?), the board was putting 1.55V into the Northbridge, standard voltage being 1.175V.
I wonder whether I reduced the lifespan of the components by much?
Moral of the story being; don't just let the board 'auto-detect' voltages!
I have an AMD Phenom X4 9850 BE, it was running at about 75C load. I understood these to be hot chips, so no biggy. I didn't come across any stability issues and everything was working fine. I've had this system on 24x7 for 5-6 months now, running plenty of virtual machines for testing/learning etc. I only touched the BIOS when I initially setup the machine.
I have an ASRock A780FullDisplayPort motherboard. When the CPU is set to auto frequency/voltage you can't actually tell what voltage is going into your chip and NB, it simply doesn't show the stats on the screen - it's only when you set the option to Manual that it shows the current voltage.
So, I decided to see what the cause of these high temps were. I found that the board was auto-detecting a voltage of 1.55V and shoving that through my Phenom

I wonder whether I reduced the lifespan of the components by much?

Moral of the story being; don't just let the board 'auto-detect' voltages!