Doesnt every motherboard have a fail safe now where it shutsd down if its going to do damage?
My Asus P7P55D Pro does as i mistakelnly put a massive overclock (something like 5ghz) and it refused to let me save it and restart, instead it just said "unsuccesful overclock"
Matt
The unsuccessful overclock is just a form of self correcting bios to allow boot after you put in silly settings. It wont help if the system is stable enough to boot into windows, but high enough voltage to fry the cpu in half an hour.
OP. To be sure of a clean cmos reset, its best to remove the cable from the PSU to the motherboard (including the ATX+12 cable), remove the battery, and put the clr cmos jumper on the short/clear position, and then leave it for 30 minutes before removing the jumper, refitting the battery and finally reconnecting the cables to the PSU.
Reasons are the battery and PSU both supply power to the cmos chip, while the jumper drains the power, sometimes a few seconds shorted will reset it, but on some motherboards the battery/psu will still be supplying enough power to retain some settings, and likely cause corruption and boot failer.