I'm sorry to inform you, but unlike overclocking, undervolting does not void the warranty. And the issues that come up from undervolting are well known, and nothing alike what happens when overclocking goes too far.
I do agree that cooling pads do work, to some extent, depending on their configuration and quality. I think what you really mean is that overclocking should be the very last solution, but that's for performance, and a whole different deal :) And this is why people that undervolt should never jump straight out to the minimum voltage on all multipliers. Now that would indeed increase significantly the risk of issues from said operation. On 19 Abr, 13:29, NeoDragon <[email protected]> wrote: > All of you guys... are crazy. Laptops are way to sensitive to be > played with hardware side. Also, lot's of people don't realize that > when they are playing with their laptops, it usually sits on a table > or a flat surface, if your fan happens to take is intake of air from > the bottom of the said laptop, it is bound to overheat at some point! > Cooling pads ARE the solution to it OR simply call the laptop > manufacturer and try to get your warranty privileges, who knows they > might send you a brand new laptop because your laptop serie as a major > flaw. > Undervolting should be the very very last solution to your problems. > It voids warranty, and again, your laptop is very sensitive, therefore > any changes to your hardware might result in unknown errors/crashes/ > even hardware failures. > > IF you still wanna go for it, do so safely, and please head > tohttp://www.overclockers.com/forums/, these guys know what they are > talking about. -- 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS
