Wednesday, June 4th 2008
Intel Says Yes to Overclocking, but No to Warranty of Overclocked Death Chips
During Computex 2008, Intel said that they'll change their strategy when it comes to overclocking and allowing users to squeeze extra performance from their systems. Overclocking capabilities will be the main feature of Intel's 4 series chipsets, said Eric Mentzer, Intel's vice president and general manager of the Graphics Development Group, in an interview at the Computex exhibition in Taipei. "We spend a lot of time working with our motherboard partners to figure out all the hidden bits inside, helping them figure out how to bring the best out of these platforms," Mentzer said. In the past and sometimes even today Intel used to lock down its chips to prevent them from overclocking, and that's exactly the time when terms like "FSB wall" started to mean something. Now the company is focusing to eliminate all the overclocking obstacles for us, but that will come with the cost of the warranty which won't cover death chips that were overclocked. Now comes the perfect time to ask, how is Intel going to know if my motherboard or CPU were overclocked?
Source:
InfoWorld
33 Comments on Intel Says Yes to Overclocking, but No to Warranty of Overclocked Death Chips
What about resellers, do you think they will be given devices by intel to tell whether a CPU has been overclocked or not? Or do resellers just send the chips back to intel?
If my crapp mobo or PSU put say, 1.40v through it (which i use to run 3.6Ghz)... intel would rightly blame them. Its not intels fault if your house gets struck by lightning, its not their fault if your mobo or PSU dies and kills their CPU.
If you had a spike in voltage or a lightning strike well thats just tough luck i guess *shrug*
People DO overclock, obviously, and ask for warranties. I've had people try and return CPU's bought from me saying 'it just died' and they've popped off the heatspreader, killed the CPU, and glued it back on with superglue... i'm sure intel wont find such things amusing.
I do not mind if they dont have warranty on overclocked chips, intel with their excellent fabrication rarely has CPU deaths (most of the time its the motherboard).
I know last time they said this everyone speculated that they would put a fuse on the chip that would blow when the CPU was overvolted for anything more than a few seconds(this would eliminate the voltage spike killing your warranty issue).
I assume a lot of resellers will have to change their CPU return policies because of this, and give themselve time to either send the chip to Intel for testing or test it themselves before shipping out the replacement.
I think this is a good move, personally. I hate people that kill hardware themselves overclocking or whatever, and then send it in for Warranty when they don't deserve it. It makes the prices higher for everyone.
One thing I really wish they did is provide that nice copper flower heatpipe cooler for all their mid range CPUs instead of they super high end CPUs.... :( I want one of those!!!
If this is true, then it would mean the biggest change in policy since the PII! :toast:
^^
i personally would prefer it that they take no responsibility but dont lock up the chips allowing for overclocking than if they lock up all the chips!