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Originally posted by OPUS1
I'd go with Ceramique, non conductive and just as good.
Originally posted by MontyAC
Shin-Etsu is good but hard as hell to spread. I tried it but switched to Artic Silver.
Originally posted by Fatal
What about Nanotherm PCM. I heard about it last year, but never tried it. Anybody try it?
From what I've heard, the Cooler Master is a mix of Microsi and some other compounds. It does not perform near as well as the real Microsi.Shin Etsu's thermal compound can be found rebadged as cooler master premium heatsink compound (with the blue cap) if anyone is interested.
Originally posted by OPUS1
I'd go with Ceramique, non conductive and just as good.
Ceramique does not contain any metal or other electrically conductive materials. It is a pure electrical insulator, neither electrically conductive nor capacitive.
While much safer than electrically conductive silver and copper greases, Arctic Silver 5 should be kept away from electrical traces, pins, and leads. While it is not electrically conductive, the compound is very slightly capacitive and could potentially cause problems if it bridges two close-proximity electrical paths.
Originally posted by OPUS1
Hey theTIK:
From Arctic Page:
blabhalbhablhabalbh
Mean't "slightly capacitive" sorry
Your more wrong then me,so you read
Originally posted by OPUS1
Hey theTIK:
From Arctic Page:
Mean't "slightly capacitive" sorry
Your more wrong then me,so you read
Originally posted by DeRailur
Has anyone here lapped a heatsink after it has been in use for awhile? I did recently with a copper heatsink I bought at a local pc shop. It had been on my t-bird for about a year before I got around to taking it off and lapping it. The retention mechanism for the heatsink was one of those pita two screw driver technique ones, quite a bit off pressure produced from this. Anyways, after lapping for a bit I took a look at the bottom of the heatsink and there was a portion right in the middle that was unsanded. It was the perfect shape and size of my tbird core! Heh, I am assuming that the heat and pressure and the softness of the copper cause the bottom of the heatsink to "form" around the core. I havent tested it, but its possible that using no TIM might be better with this particular set up. Im sure it would suck ass for awhile, until the heatsink formed around the core, but after that I guess it would be "ideal". Dunno, whats your thoughts on this?
I'm sure it takes more than 70c (max temp for some of the athlon dies, wont say all) to melt copper ;POriginally posted by JeffB
Would that even be efficent if it was melted to core? Couldn't that potenially cause some problems?