FaRaOn29
Usuario (Argentina)
Problema con (i5/i7) - Varios mothers y micros quemados El tema es q la mayoría de las marcas de mothers usan sockets fabricados por Foxconn (Asus, Gigabyte, Msi, Evga, DFI, etc etc), aunque Evga, DFI y MSI tienen algunos sockets fabricados por LOTES en algunos mothers, y estos no presentan esta falla. http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.aspx?i=3661 http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/budget-p55-motherboard,2436-15.html Para resumir, se ve q hay muchisimos pads del micro q no hacen contacto como deben en los sockets fabricados por foxconn, lo q resulta en una insuficiente transmición de la energía, por esto es q ante overclocks extremos aparece esta falla No mucha gente ocea arriba de los 5ghz q es cuando esto pasa, pero nadie parece saber por ahora cual sería la consecuencia q podría tener con el paso del tiempo este problema en una pc con OC moderado o incluso en velocidad stock... temperaturas desmedidas?, reducción de la vida útil del procesador?. Hasta ahora en adandtech no dieron los modelos de los mothers fallados a la espera de respuesta de las marcas, pero se nota claramente q la siguiente foto pertenece a un Asus Maximus III Formula: Gigabyte P55-UD6: Ya hay, incluso, casos en 4.1ghz de oc: dijo:my freinds p55 max3 from newegg socket melted down tonight. and he was only on air at 4.1. his system shut down and would not restart. he called me i said just out of curiosity to check his cpu socket and sure enough in the same corner he had the socket melted like these pics shown here and the bottom of the cpu was messed up. he did have the foxconn socket also. he just got his last week also. this is sure making me a bit nervous about buying anything p55 right now. as i said he was only on air. i do not know his settings but he said it was at 4.1 ill try to find out more of what settings he was running tomm Se ve q Foxconn sabía del asunto desde mayo y aviso a Intel: dijo:thats the part Lathode that is all under wraps. I've had two vendors come forwards and show me what Foxconn sent them. Foxconn claim the issue was identified in May and that Intel were due to revise their design to rectify. Apprently these were supposed to be sample sockets with the issue and all issues were supposed to be in house in some vendor labs. Since then there have been issues reported on what is supposed to be the revised Foxconn socket (or samples that have gone into the wild on retail boards), so I'm not sure what to believe at this point. What some of the vendors have seens themselves is not centric to an earlier model or revision of socket. http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?t=234723&page=12