When a Tweak isn't a Tweak.
The actual word 'tweak' means to 'fine tune'. A 25% adjustment in voltage isn't a tweak. So if you want to go on semantics, what some reviewers have done is voltage 'boost'.
The Hardware Canucks article also has this paragraph:
In addition, here is an extract from ASUS’ GTX 590 reviewer’s guide:
It is not advised to exceed the 1.050 to 1.065 vcore range as this begins to meet the limits for the OCP/OVP mechanism on the card. Exceeding these values without disabling OCP/OVP or having superior cooling could affect the lifespan and functionality of the card/gpu.
I have read through the posts so i don't think this has been posted up but it should point as an indicator that if cards fried, it's because even our beloved W1zz wanted to push it (unless that's what the e-mails were all about but my reading was that was an NV email not the actual ASUS reviewer guide.?).
Other review sites have pushed the clock up and didn't bother overvolting. Reviewing the reviews, most that OC'd got 690 core, even without voltage changes.
The argument shouldn't be about fried cards. The cards fried due to
a) wrong drivers,
b) in the ASUS case, reviewers not following guidelines
c) MOST IMPORTANTLY, Nvidia failing to tell the reviewers exactly what drivers to use or not having them on time.
The card doesn't suck. In almost all reviews it gets praise for what it delivers, performance without the associated drawbacks of noise and size. The fact some folk killed it is NV's fault for poor marketing and technical advice.
Dare I say it W1zzard's review is one of the most scathing. Most places give it 8 or 9 out of 10.
If the new driver doesn't allow the same cock ups (and no more cards fry) then this whole argument is irrelevant.