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Yes i meant only overclocking the processor without undervolting it (specially for people that are unable to undervolt like myself). I didnīt make myself clear on that post.
Thanks for clearing that.
Yes, if you dont undervolt it properly. However, if you follow the guide step by step, they let you learn the level at which your individual processor is still stable, with processor intensive testing at each step. Finding the freezes/black outs is part of the process and then you up the voltage from there to the level which you didnt get any - whats your lowest stable voltage, which for me was a fair bit lower than the defaults, and resulted in my system running cooler all the time, and is 100% stable. Might make battery life better too...Ive not really tested that, so its just an assumption.
Its not overly techie either. Im not an IT pro, and only know what Ive picked up as Ive gone along, and found it easy. Maybe wouldnt reccomend it for a complete computer novice, but there arent many of those on here! If you are comfortable adding a stick of ram, or updating a driver etc, you'll be fine with this, as long as you follow the guide properly.
Edit - undervolting is totally different to overclocking. Overclocking is for getting more out of your processor by working it harder. Undervolting is for getting the same out of your processor, with the minimum stable voltage used, which makes your processor run cooler.
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