F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Destroyed the central processing unit.

Destroyed the central processing unit.

Destroyed the central processing unit.

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Mickey5500
Junior Member
18
10-10-2024, 05:11 AM
#1
After about five years, I believe I finally stopped one of the two CPUs in my PC due to excessive overclocking. It was running at 40% overclock with an X5680 chipset, and the Vcore reached 1.55v until it failed. I suspect the issue was related to the IMC, even though I thought RAM was fine a week ago. Today it’s getting worse—can’t boot with stock clocks or even with good RAM. When I disabled one CPU and enabled the other, it worked perfectly. It seems the problem might be with the CPU itself, especially since the swap of RAM resolved the issue last week.
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Mickey5500
10-10-2024, 05:11 AM #1

After about five years, I believe I finally stopped one of the two CPUs in my PC due to excessive overclocking. It was running at 40% overclock with an X5680 chipset, and the Vcore reached 1.55v until it failed. I suspect the issue was related to the IMC, even though I thought RAM was fine a week ago. Today it’s getting worse—can’t boot with stock clocks or even with good RAM. When I disabled one CPU and enabled the other, it worked perfectly. It seems the problem might be with the CPU itself, especially since the swap of RAM resolved the issue last week.

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MrBoby89400
Member
66
10-11-2024, 07:51 PM
#2
If you suspect the VRM, consider exchanging the chips' sockets. It might look like a CPU at first glance.
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MrBoby89400
10-11-2024, 07:51 PM #2

If you suspect the VRM, consider exchanging the chips' sockets. It might look like a CPU at first glance.

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SIGNORET
Member
160
10-11-2024, 09:20 PM
#3
When VRMs malfunction, they usually trigger short-circuit protection, causing the board to shut down after just a brief moment. This suggests the CPU is likely the issue.
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SIGNORET
10-11-2024, 09:20 PM #3

When VRMs malfunction, they usually trigger short-circuit protection, causing the board to shut down after just a brief moment. This suggests the CPU is likely the issue.

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HarasNes
Junior Member
31
10-11-2024, 10:27 PM
#4
I might not be able to do it tomorrow. I’m also ordering another CPU because $12 seems reasonable. However, I’m curious if a few capacitors might have failed and the voltage is now very unstable, which could cause issues since capacitors help smooth things out. I don’t know if replacing the CPU or swapping sockets would be easier—maybe testing first would help.
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HarasNes
10-11-2024, 10:27 PM #4

I might not be able to do it tomorrow. I’m also ordering another CPU because $12 seems reasonable. However, I’m curious if a few capacitors might have failed and the voltage is now very unstable, which could cause issues since capacitors help smooth things out. I don’t know if replacing the CPU or swapping sockets would be easier—maybe testing first would help.

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Edgecrusher2kX
Junior Member
14
10-11-2024, 11:32 PM
#5
It remains quite improbable, since Intel incorporates significant voltage tolerance into CPU specifications. It would be extremely rare for a CPU to fail to boot under such conditions, especially if the board was well-made and had decent voltage regulation initially. A reduction in maximum clock speed by 200-300MHz is feasible, but causing the system to not start at all is unlikely.
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Edgecrusher2kX
10-11-2024, 11:32 PM #5

It remains quite improbable, since Intel incorporates significant voltage tolerance into CPU specifications. It would be extremely rare for a CPU to fail to boot under such conditions, especially if the board was well-made and had decent voltage regulation initially. A reduction in maximum clock speed by 200-300MHz is feasible, but causing the system to not start at all is unlikely.

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NooLele
Posting Freak
847
10-16-2024, 02:04 AM
#6
It runs smoothly without any posting or login issues, but it crashes right when loading an operating system. Even USB drives cause an instant reboot. It's a high-end board with an EVGA SR-2, packed with billions of VRM stages—still, the value keeps rising and that recent sale for $1G is pretty wild.
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NooLele
10-16-2024, 02:04 AM #6

It runs smoothly without any posting or login issues, but it crashes right when loading an operating system. Even USB drives cause an instant reboot. It's a high-end board with an EVGA SR-2, packed with billions of VRM stages—still, the value keeps rising and that recent sale for $1G is pretty wild.

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Error_Sans55
Member
245
10-16-2024, 07:28 PM
#7
That's quite the setup. It sounds like you're experimenting with different components and trying to figure out what's causing performance issues. You're considering swapping parts to see if the problem lies with the hardware or the software. It seems you're weighing options carefully, especially since you mentioned the SR2 chips are rare. The idea of testing a different CPU and seeing if the issue is with the chip makes sense. You're also thinking about balancing cooling solutions and performance expectations for your current setup. It's a bit of a trial-and-error process, but you're doing it thoughtfully.
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Error_Sans55
10-16-2024, 07:28 PM #7

That's quite the setup. It sounds like you're experimenting with different components and trying to figure out what's causing performance issues. You're considering swapping parts to see if the problem lies with the hardware or the software. It seems you're weighing options carefully, especially since you mentioned the SR2 chips are rare. The idea of testing a different CPU and seeing if the issue is with the chip makes sense. You're also thinking about balancing cooling solutions and performance expectations for your current setup. It's a bit of a trial-and-error process, but you're doing it thoughtfully.

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Blackfin323
Junior Member
34
10-19-2024, 05:17 AM
#8
It's fine at 1.55v as long as you manage the cooling.
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Blackfin323
10-19-2024, 05:17 AM #8

It's fine at 1.55v as long as you manage the cooling.

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skyfall666
Member
50
10-23-2024, 02:24 AM
#9
If you're seeing 1700MHz per core on RAM with triple channel, it's a bit unusual given your stable clock of 187-188MHz and the multipliers you've set. Your current setup uses 10x for RAM, but boosting to 1.58V or 1.53V might affect stability. Check your Vcore values and ensure they're within safe ranges. Adjustments could be needed to maintain consistent performance.
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skyfall666
10-23-2024, 02:24 AM #9

If you're seeing 1700MHz per core on RAM with triple channel, it's a bit unusual given your stable clock of 187-188MHz and the multipliers you've set. Your current setup uses 10x for RAM, but boosting to 1.58V or 1.53V might affect stability. Check your Vcore values and ensure they're within safe ranges. Adjustments could be needed to maintain consistent performance.

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Silvinha10
Senior Member
694
10-25-2024, 02:27 AM
#10
I used QPI/VTT at 1.4x for many years without issues. 1.55–1.58 feels a bit too steep; it should be reserved for bench work.
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Silvinha10
10-25-2024, 02:27 AM #10

I used QPI/VTT at 1.4x for many years without issues. 1.55–1.58 feels a bit too steep; it should be reserved for bench work.

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