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If your temps are good I don't see why not.
This is what was worrying me....(as i don't want to damage my new cpu for a few weeks)It's the fact the 45nm are very susceptible to degradation when you go over a certain voltage threshold. I think it's around 1.45?
Cheers TomI'd stay where you are, you really are not going to see much real world difference by pushing it more and possibly introducing degradation.
It's a good clock. I managed 4Ghz under 1.4v anything more requried a hike to 1.45 which I was not happy with. Especially considering how delicate the silicon is on these chips. So I'm keeping here 24/7![]()
I read through a whole load of pages in easyrider overclocking thread and all i could mainly find was that i was wasting my time reading a load of crap postsPlease use SEARCH as its asked all the time
They use 1.2v default so obv you dont pump it up as high as a older E6850 or such, 1.45v is my safe limit, where as I was happy to use 1.65v on my E6850.
On the side of the box for an E8500 (45nm) it says 1.225volt max and on the side of the box for an e6600 (65nm) it says 1.35volt maxI just got an E8500, and on the sticker on the side it says "1.25V max". When I saw that I was really confused due to what I read in this thread... what do you guys think about it?
crank the suckers up, its a cheap cpu - enjoy the speed.
its warranted and will probably last forever (as long as you need it)
so long as its properly cooled...............
however some ppl will always get a duff one that blows.
i have a e8200 at 3.92ghz - 1.45v.