thermal grease question

This is a discussion about thermal grease question in the Windows Hardware category; Just out of curiousity, when I purchased my AOpen AK73 pro mobo with 800MHz T-Bird the local pc shop asked me if I wanted them to place the cpu and HSF onto the mobo, and since I've heard so many horror stories about how fragile the tbirds/durons were I told them to go ahead.

Windows Hardware 9627 This topic was started by , . Last reply by ,


data/avatar/default/avatar03.webp

242 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-11-10
Just out of curiousity, when I purchased my AOpen AK73 pro mobo with 800MHz T-Bird the local pc shop asked me if I wanted them to place the cpu and HSF onto the mobo, and since I've heard so many horror stories about how fragile the tbirds/durons were I told them to go ahead. However, I did not actually witness the installation, but noticed quite a good bit of thermal grease on the edge of the heatsink, which appears to me like they applied it over the complete cpu instead of just over the core. The pc still boots up fine and the temperature I'm getting are:
Idle: 28~30C
Normal: 32~36 C
Full Load: 42~47 C
This temperature was after placing additional fans to my case since I have a compact case with s***loads of hardware inside.
Anyways, back to the question, would this pose a problem in the long run? Or should I remove the heatsink and clean out the excess thermal grease and just apply a thin layer over the core?

Participate in our website and join the conversation

You already have an account on our website? To log in, use the link provided below.
Login
Create a new user account. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds.
Register
This subject has been archived. New comments and votes cannot be submitted.
Dec 15
Created
Dec 15
Last Response
0
Likes
2 minutes
Read Time
User User User
Users

Responses to this topic


data/avatar/default/avatar17.webp

757 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-10-14
from what ive heard is that less is better. Apply a thin film of grease, and tack glue in 4 corners, then apply hs. There was a site just recently up @ ntcompatible's main page that went through this.

data/avatar/default/avatar03.webp

242 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-11-10
OP
thanks, I read numerous sites that say thin is better. I really don't have any problems, my main concern is will it effect the cpu in the long run. I really don't want to have to remove the heatsink, the clip is really a b***h to get off. I tried already and couldn't get it off the 'gentle' way and don't really want to have to involve pliers to the scene

data/avatar/default/avatar03.webp

242 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-11-10
OP
man you sure are quick hehe, thanks, I checked out that site. Oh well, I will go ahead and 'try' to get that heat sink off and remove all that excess gunk.

data/avatar/default/avatar35.webp

462 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-03-14
To get the heatsink off easier, use your pc for about an hour.
You should find that the HS will just slide off.
 

 
Yak
 
--