mikesw Posted January 27, 2009 Posted January 27, 2009 (edited) Articles from AMD suggest thermal grease for lidded processors and pads for non-lidded.Is this the same for Intel?At what maximum temperature should one use pads vs. grease? if it is greater than 115watts use padsand below that to use grease or vice versa?Who sells thermalpads and what is the typical cost? AMD says the pads are based on phase change material.I came across this site but they want $26.39 for just one pad...http://parts.digikey.com/1/parts/988651-th...-1500-4-x4.htmlor,http://www.intermark-usa.com/products/Thermal/index.shtmlhttp://www.intermark-usa.com/products/Ther...0-%20123008.pdfHmm, a 4 piece demo kit from intermark is $230. I don't think so. I wonder how Dell and the computer manufacturer can usethermal pads when the stuff is so expensive? Edited January 27, 2009 by mikesw
RJM Posted January 27, 2009 Posted January 27, 2009 (edited) The Digikey pad you have listed is 4" X 4" and 1/4" thick, I think you might want somthing more like this.http://www.sidewindercomputers.com/shpc.htmlI myself have always prefered thermal paste. It seems to me that some of the pads deform with time and heat cycles and the heat sinksloosen up.Although, the pad at the link is most likely thin enough not to have this problem. Edited January 27, 2009 by RJM
mikesw Posted January 27, 2009 Author Posted January 27, 2009 The Digikey pad you have listed is 4" X 4" and 1/4" thick, I think you might want somthing more like this.http://www.sidewindercomputers.com/shpc.htmlI myself have always prefered thermal paste. It seems to me that some of the pads deform with time and heat cycles and the heat sinksloosen up.Although, the pad at the link is most likely thin enough not to have this problem.Thanks. They said it was AMD approved. Does anybody approve it for intel processors which can run hotter?There wattage is 3.8 C W/m**2 and starts softening at 48 C.Does anybody make a higher W/M**2 and is 48C a typical number?
Zenskas Posted January 27, 2009 Posted January 27, 2009 Thanks. They said it was AMD approved. Does anybody approve it for intel processors which can run hotter?There wattage is 3.8 C W/m**2 and starts softening at 48 C.Does anybody make a higher W/M**2 and is 48C a typical number?It starts softening at 48C. That does not mean it cannot handle a CPU that runs over 48C. It just means it gets into the tiny little cracks in the heatsink when the temperature gets to 48C. That is a good thing because then it should transfer heat even better. I however recommend thermal grease. I use arctic silver 5 on my 9600gt and my core 2 duo e7300. Lowers temps by a couple of degrees compared to the thermal grease that came on them stock.
PC_LOAD_LETTER Posted January 27, 2009 Posted January 27, 2009 http://www.arcticsilver.com/as5.htm has never let me down. its cheap too
mikesw Posted January 28, 2009 Author Posted January 28, 2009 http://www.arcticsilver.com/as5.htm has never let me down. its cheap tooFrom newegg they mention this.Components you attach with Arctic Silver Thermal Adhesive will stay attached forever.So, this means if I replace the processor in the future, that I can't since it creates a permanent bond,or can I still do the twist and remove to break the bond?
PC_LOAD_LETTER Posted January 28, 2009 Posted January 28, 2009 Components you attach with Arctic Silver Thermal Adhesive will stay attached forever.ive never used the thermal Adhesive (though ive heard of people using it on GPUs where the fan assembly hangs from the card) but the thermal compound does form a pretty tight bond but nothing a slight 1-2 degree twist wont break
Gradius2 Posted January 28, 2009 Posted January 28, 2009 A nice review here:http://www.overclock3d.net/reviews.php?typ...aste_comparisonCoollaboratory sells Liquid MetalPad now:http://www.coollaboratory.com/en/product_metalpad.shtml
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