Or you can goto http://www.elitebast-ards.com/page.php?pag...ad=1&comments=1 (remove the - bast , it should be b@stards, but they blocked the word) And learn it for free, still if you want support, you can ask bl00df0x. Overclocking does not ruin your hardware, overvolting does, watch out with the volts, do not put them on auto when overclocking, but manual and set them. Only add up more volts when its really necessary when you want to go higher.
I have started my msn lessons from bloodfox and they are very informative and -----. I recommend them to anyone.
So many costumers and no results? Xelink, okay, but clocking higher does not gives that much extra heat, then voltage does, so mostly overclocking on stock voltage is fine.
That is pretty much right! Overvolting does crazy things to a CPU, not only heat, but it can dramatically shorten the lifespan of a CPU. Be very careful with volts. PLEASE!
the main reason why overvolting i risky is because it also encourages further clocking. if a 15% overvolt allows for a 10% higher overclock than on stock voltage, heat output goes up nearly 50%(45.5%) with only a 10% theoretical maximum gain(there are scenarios where you are entirely bound by another component like a video card/CPU or a harddrive). and that isn't even a crazy scenario, on DDR2 RAM which is speced for 1.8V 2.2V is a 22% increase, albiet there are many DDR2 kits which are rated for use at 2.2V without harm, but some older kits just can't handle it as well as micron d9 and to a lesser extent PROmos and elpida. same goes for a CPU, running at 1.5V is a 15% increase over 1.3V and might very well allow you a 10-15% clock speed increase(from say 3.5 to say 4.0GHz). plus there is electromigration to deal with whichis independant of heat. increasing the voltage allows for the amperage delivered to a part to increase in a linear fashion and the amperage is what kills.