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2010-04-05
, 13:31
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Posts: 67 |
Thanked: 36 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#932
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The Following User Says Thank You to LondonBenji For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-04-05
, 13:33
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Posts: 162 |
Thanked: 24 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Essex, UK
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#933
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2010-04-05
, 13:34
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Posts: 51 |
Thanked: 8 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#934
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to xgrind For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-04-05
, 13:35
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Posts: 664 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Australia
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#935
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2010-04-05
, 13:43
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 10 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Stockholm
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#936
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125Mhz comes from https://bugs.maemo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=7116 (as you can see, testing firmwares had scaling_min_freq set to 125Mhz)..
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2010-04-05
, 13:46
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Posts: 503 |
Thanked: 267 times |
Joined on Jul 2006
@ Helsinki
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#937
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Flandry, you can not argue against real science and you type the truth. a key point:
"So while there is a linear scaling for temperature within a given range of frequencies, there's an exponential decline in lifetime."
That is my point The point for which the temps spike significantly (five to ten degrees), is the operational ceiling and also the point for exponental / accelerated lifespan decline.
We are speaking the same thing, I am just trying to "hillbilly" it down a notch I am a hillbilly BTW
To avoid significant device degradation for commercial temperature OMAP3530/OMAP3525 devices (0°C ≤ Tj ≤ 90°C), the device power-on hours (POH) must be limited to one of the following: • 100K total POH when operating across all OPPs and keeping the time spent at OPP5-OPP6 to less than 23K POH. • 50K total POH when operating at OPP5 - OPP6. • 44K total POH with no restrictions to the proportion of these POH at operating points OPP1 - OPP6.
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2010-04-05
, 13:55
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Posts: 1,255 |
Thanked: 393 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ US
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#939
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There is an official datasheet from TI (for omap3530 which is very similar to omap3430) with the information about the expected lifespan. Running the chip all the time at 600MHz vs. 500MHz already decreases lifespan twice, hence 600MHz is considered overdrive:
If this effect is exponential, then pushing the chip above 600MHz may reduce lifespan quite dramatically. I think that TI would sell chips labeled at 1GHz if they were sure that this clock frequency is safe, it is in their best interests after all, considering the tough competition.Code:To avoid significant device degradation for commercial temperature OMAP3530/OMAP3525 devices (0°C ≤ Tj ≤ 90°C), the device power-on hours (POH) must be limited to one of the following: • 100K total POH when operating across all OPPs and keeping the time spent at OPP5-OPP6 to less than 23K POH. • 50K total POH when operating at OPP5 - OPP6. • 44K total POH with no restrictions to the proportion of these POH at operating points OPP1 - OPP6.
Those who buy new smartphones each half a year may not care much, but I feel sorry for those who would buy a second hand N900, heavily worn out by some overclocker.
The Following User Says Thank You to Rushmore For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-04-05
, 13:56
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Posts: 503 |
Thanked: 267 times |
Joined on Jul 2006
@ Helsinki
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#940
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"So while there is a linear scaling for temperature within a given range of frequencies, there's an exponential decline in lifetime."
That is my point from another perspective of it (in regards to a result) The point for which the temps spike significantly (five to ten degrees), is the operational ceiling and also the point for exponential / accelerated lifespan decline.
We are speaking the same thing, I am just trying to "hillbilly" it down a notch I am a hillbilly BTW
Added:
I do not think the N900 will have a profound lifespan issue at 800mhz as a max clock- based on Droid testing and me not noticing a temp increase or additional battery drain (compared to 600mhz). My guess is the 125mhz min is offsetting the battery, since my device spends more time idle than active.
Last edited by Rushmore; 2010-04-05 at 13:35. Reason: Added