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- Feb 19, 2007
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- Yankee lost in the Mountains of East TN
Processor | 5800x(2)/5700g/5600x/5600g/2700x/1700x/1700 |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI B550 Carbon (2)/ MSI z490 Unify/Asus Strix B550-F/MSI B450 Tomahawk (3) |
Cooling | EK AIO 360 (2)/EK AIO 240, Arctic Cooling Freezer II 280/EVGA CLC 280/Noctua D15/Cryorig M9(2) |
Memory | 32 GB Ballistix Elite/32 GB TridentZ/16GB Mushkin Redline Black/16 GB Dominator |
Video Card(s) | Asus Strix RTX3060/EVGA 970(2)/Asus 750 ti/Old Quadros |
Storage | Samsung 970 EVO M.2 NVMe 500GB/WD Black M.2 NVMe 500GB/Adata 500gb NVMe |
Display(s) | Acer 1080p 22"/ (3) Samsung 22" 1080p |
Case | (2) Lian Li Lancool II Mesh/Corsair 4000D /Phanteks Eclipse 500a/Be Quiet Pure Base 500/Bones of HAF |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova 850G(2)/EVGA Supernova GT 650w/Phantek Amps 750w/Seasonic Focus 750w |
Mouse | Generic Black wireless (5) |
Keyboard | Generic Black wireless (5) |
Software | Win 10/Ubuntu |
Out of 100 CPU's sold only 5 may be overclocked. So sell 3 of those 5 people a "plan".
Out of 5 that are going to overclock 1 might blow a processor.
Out of 80% of their CPU returns 75% are might be due to overclocked damage they can't prove and they lose 100% of profit.
Anything they can recoup is just going to help cover their cost, and determine how much of their actual userbase/sales failure is due to operating beyond official specs and thus if it is worth it to lock the processors.
Anytime a company like Intel does something just follow the money and it will make sense.
Exactly. In this case though, it's a nice little insurance plan on the cheap, for those of us who push our chips more than a little. I've not killed a chip, after owning and overclocking over 100 chips, but it's good peace of mind. It also means that you don't have to lie if you do kill one.