Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Electronic Equipment > PC Hardware Chips > Can undervoltin...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 4 Topic 2716 of 2798
Post > Topic >>

Can undervolting (not overclocking) actually *damage* a chip?

by Adam Ierymenko <adam.ierymenko@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 25, 2008 at 09:07 AM

Hey guys...

I'm looking for a deep technical answer on this question from someone
who knows something about chip design or at least chip quality
control, technical specs, etc.

I'm curious about whether undervolting can actually damage a chip. I
know it could make it unstable, but could it actually damage the chip
or shorten its life span (or the life span of other components)? Is
this something to be concerned about or is it something like "yeah, it
might shorten the theoretical life span from 100 years to 50 years"?

The reason I'm asking is this comment:

"Depending on the voltage your adjusting you could fry the chip by
under-volting. Most chips these days require a few different voltages
to run, and if you lower one, there are sometimes sneak paths where
the logic that is not getting enough power can draw power from the I/O
voltage, or other auxiliary voltages on the chip which can burn out IO
and other parts since they were never designed to carry the amount of
current drawn through the sneak path. There are usually some
protections in place to prevent the burn out, but with millions of
transistors on a chip it's sometimes hard to catch all of the possible
sneak paths."

Here's the context of the comment:

http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?p=5213018

Is this really a potential issue that one would face in the normal
life span of a computer? I would think that undervolting (keep in mind
no overclocking here) would be much safer than overvolting/
overclocking where I have heard fry stories. :)

-Adam
 




 4 Posts in Topic:
Can undervolting (not overclocking) actually *damage* a chip?
Adam Ierymenko <adam.i  2008-03-25 09:07:54 
Re: Can undervolting (not overclocking) actually *damage* a chip
Franc Zabkar <fzabkar@  2008-03-26 06:53:22 
Re: Can undervolting (not overclocking) actually *damage* a chip
"Alvin Andries"  2008-03-25 22:14:10 
Re: Can undervolting (not overclocking) actually *damage* a chip
"Del Cecchi" &l  2008-03-26 09:34:52 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Sun Nov 23 11:07:59 CST 2008.