GonzoGamer said:
Not to be a hard-on but do you have a source for that? That?s actually my biggest worry: that all the crashes & hard shut downs will wear out the ps3. There?s a big difference between a game really annoying me and a game breaking my expensive console.
I can't say one way or the other regarding a console - I don't mess with them, I don't own them. I'll occasionally play them over a friends house or something, but not exactly my forte . . . I can draw some general conclusions, though, based solely on a console's similarity to a PC.
TBH, considering modern PC hardware - crashes and glitches will not wear out hardware. No source is needed. Hardware components contain a BIOS which tells the motherboard BIOS how they're supposed to be operated. As well, the component BIOS usually contains (nowadays) fail-safe algorithms that will simply shut down the hardware if something is happening on the hardware level that would be damaging. i.e. too high of voltages, too high of a processor or board temp, PCB components failing etc. etc. Years ago there weren't as many fail-safes in place, and the motherboard BIOS was extremelly rudimentary. Clocking a component was actually done via setting switches on the board itself - not via the BIOS.
It's in the same category of myths as turning your PC on or off is damaging to the components, or the contrary that leaving it on all the time is damaging.
The way it breaks down on PC, though, is that glitches, bugs and "soft" crashes are usually due to faulty coding within the application, background programs or applications, or the occasional driver issue. Either way, it's almost always software related. "Hard" crashes - those where the system goes to a black screen or re-boots itself - are typically related more to hardware problems (failing components, hardware overheating/shutting down), driver issues or hardware incompatibility. As far as a console is concerned, hard crashes are more than likely going to be due to the one or both processors overheating and needing to be temporarily shut down.
The question is - do these types of issues happen more after long gaming sessions? If so, overheating is probably a prime culprit.
Truthfully, the biggest headache you might run into today (at least in regards to a PC) is the OS installation becoming corrupted from a hard crash (i.e. BSoD). Typically then, it's only system files, and can usually be corrected by repairing the OS installation, or reverting to a previous system backup.
What I'd be more worried about, whether you own a console or PC, are environmental conditions that can cause degradation and/or failure of hardware. Too humid of an environment, too hot of an environment, too dusty of an environment (including smoking around your hardware) can cause hardware temps to soar. The xBox is notorious for overheating issues. Being rough and knocking your hardware around can cause things to become loose (internal coolers or expansion components), even damage weak factory solder points on PCB components.