Physical defects from a run of Nvidia chips in 2008 are outside the scope of this discussion. A defective manufacturing process can certainly have an impact on many aspects of a chips capabilities [and even class].
It really is relevant the metals used to solder things down have a finite fatigue life to them there is no unlimited life limit for non-ferrous metals (On such a small scale any small difference in the material expansion can induce large stresses), Nvidia just made a very bad mechanical design for their BGA packages and is an example of extremely short lifespans. Electro-chemical devices have temperature dependent limits even the heat pipes have a upper an ideal operating region for best performance.
It was not a manufacturing defect it was a engineering error that they denied and got into deep trouble for trying to cover it up for a while. They could have over designed the package but instead under designed it in error or negligence.
It is very simple, although thermal design is complex and there is not a direct relationship temperature matters in engineering (One constant uniform invariant ideal temperature would be ideal but that is difficult to achieve in practice). If it didn't then all processors would run at 100C because it would be cheaper to make the computers and the limiter makes it safe there too but it won't last very long and the supporting parts won't either.