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Artic silver on cpu pins

Cat13

Golden Member
Yep, thats right. Somehow in my desperation to find the reason my new mb's wouldn't boot I got artic silver on the underside of one of my 2000+. Don't know how, maybe the fact it was almost 2am. The good news is both of my boards work fine, the bad news is that this cpu is dead. I have tried cleaning off the AS between the pins with alcohol and it looks gone, just a light haze where it was, but it wont boot.

What is the general concensus? Dead or do I still have hope?

Thanks
 
If you tried to use it while it still had AS on the pins, maybe dead. A buddy of mine killed an Athlon 1.2 in a similar fashion, getting ASII on the topside of the CPU (around all the bridges and stuff).
 
I tried to get it clean before I stuck it back in, but as soon as I turned the power on it gave me nothing. Oh well. Was bound to happen sooner or later. Guess I got myself a keychain!
 
If you get thermal paste on anything else that is not the core, it could harm the CPU? I'm a newb at thermal paste. The first time I tried to squeeze out some AS3 on the core of my old Athlon, it shot all over the place. You have to apply a lot of pressure and be careful at the same time. Anyway, I know not to do that same procedure again. But since it shot all over the face of the CPU, could that really mess it up? It got on a few of the other things that stick out of the CPU (the things that aren't the core), I think those are the bridges? Someone set me straight please
 
Originally posted by: MrEgo
If you get thermal paste on anything else that is not the core, it could harm the CPU? I'm a newb at thermal paste. The first time I tried to squeeze out some AS3 on the core of my old Athlon, it shot all over the place. You have to apply a lot of pressure and be careful at the same time. Anyway, I know not to do that same procedure again. But since it shot all over the face of the CPU, could that really mess it up? It got on a few of the other things that stick out of the CPU (the things that aren't the core), I think those are the bridges? Someone set me straight please

I squirt some out on a disposable bag. I know, it might waste but at least your dont bath your CPU in the stuff.
 
Thats what I usually do also, but this time I had like 4 cpu's laying on the desk with ram and other stuff, swapping stuff out to find the problem, happened to lay one down right into a spot of AS.

Note t oself, keep AS away from EVERYTHING!
 
I guess there must be people out there who got some kind of problem -or think they did- due to getting heat goo where it should not be. However people who do their own work find over and over again that the mess does no harm. The ordinary heat goo you are likely to buy is not electrically conductive - even Artic Silver says their stuff is not electrically conductive. I believe the rare cases of reported harm are due to some other coincidental cause. Believe me I have botched it on occasion. (I wonder how I do these things.)It is more trouble than it is worth to do more than simply take the excess off with a Q-tip or tissue and a toothpick.

But if you want to clean off the remnants completely, use some liquid dish detergent (NOT automatic.dishwasher detergent; it is corrosive.) or other household cleaner, water and a toothbrush. Dry it thoughly by using a vacuum cleaner set up to blow. (or just dry all the water beads with a paper towel and wait a few hours.)

Yes non-conductive stuff on the pins could cause poor contact. Clean it up better and give it another shot. It should not have done any permanent harm. (I have an electronics engineering degee, if that gives me any credibility.) Static electicity is a more likely culprit.

Don't put the nozzle on the CPU when you push the AS out. Push the plunger by holding on very tightly just where it enters the cylinder. When it finally gives, it won't go far. When you have a little bead on the tip, then put it on the CPU.
 
Originally posted by: KF
I guess there must be people out there who got some kind of problem -or think they did- due to getting heat goo where it should not be. However people who do their own work find over and over again that the mess does no harm. The ordinary heat goo you are likely to buy is not electrically conductive - even Artic Silver says their stuff is not electrically conductive. I believe the rare cases of reported harm are due to some other coincidental cause. Believe me I have botched it on occasion. (I wonder how I do these things.)It is more trouble than it is worth to do more than simply take the excess off with a Q-tip or tissue and a toothpick.

But if you want to clean off the remnants completely, use some liquid dish detergent (NOT automatic.dishwasher detergent; it is corrosive.) or other household cleaner, water and a toothbrush. Dry it thoughly by using a vacuum cleaner set up to blow. (or just dry all the water beads with a paper towel and wait a few hours.)

Yes non-conductive stuff on the pins could cause poor contact. Clean it up better and give it another shot. It should not have done any permanent harm. (I have an electronics engineering degee, if that gives me any credibility.) Static electicity is a more likely culprit.

Don't put the nozzle on the CPU when you push the AS out. Push the plunger by holding on very tightly just where it enters the cylinder. When it finally gives, it won't go far. When you have a little bead on the tip, then put it on the CPU.


I will try cleaning again. Maybe I will get lucky!
 
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