Could someone please define for me what "enough" is?

SneakyStuff

Diamond Member
Jan 13, 2004
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If i'm using a silicone paste on my Barton 2800+, how much should I have on there? Could someone who has experience with silicone pastes help me out here? I've taken my entire mobo out 2 times to re-apply the paste. But my cooling is still lackluster. My HSF is adequate up to a 3400+, and I have an intake fan as well, so i'm assuming it's the paste.
 

jhurst

Senior member
Mar 29, 2004
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In the case of thermal paste, less is more. For P4's they say to use a "grain of rice" sized drop on the center of the cpu spreader. For AMD, the CPU is a little bigger, so a little bigger drop is necessary. What happens is the HS squishes the thermal paste into a circle covering the CPU die (core), and creates more surface area where it is needed, right above the die. Check arctic silver's website, they have a great guide that can be applied to any thermal paste.

Also, on the base of your HS, you are going to want to want a smooth surface for starters, then rub a layer of thermal paste on it, and wipe it off completely. This will fill in the tiny cracks (microscopic) so there is less air in between the HS and CPU.
 

Dman877

Platinum Member
Jan 15, 2004
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On a naked die (which the barton is) you want to cover the entire core with a paper-thin layer, basically just spread it as thinly as possible while covering the whole core. With that said, as long as you attach the heatsink correctly, a little extra thermal paste will just get squeezed out and isn't a big deal.

The stuff jhurst is talking about applies to cpu's with integrated heatspreaders and big chips like nvidia's flip chip gpu's.
 

Soulkeeper

Diamond Member
Nov 23, 2001
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i usually put a thin coat on the heatsink and the core
just make it thin enough to where you know any surface imperfections/holes (mostly microscopic) can be filled. That's really all you need
i mean of course thermal paste has been known to dry slightly over time but as long as you are around a paper thin layer, before pressure is applied, you should be fine.
it prob smashes to 1/100th or 1/1000th of an inch anyways and you don't want too much goo all over the cpu.
 

Bar81

Banned
Mar 25, 2004
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Isn't there an illustrated set of instructions on the arctic silver website???
 

SneakyStuff

Diamond Member
Jan 13, 2004
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ok, well anyway, I just re-did it for the 4th time with the silicone paste, I made sure the CPU was emaculately clean, not a trace of it anywhere, and re-applied it, in a smaller amount. I covered the slug with a "paper thin" layer, and I made tiny droplets towards the center, so it would spread out when the heatsink was pressed down. Right now i've got a 47' CPU, and a 53' C diode. I'm going to monitor these temps and see if they drop any once the paste sets in. I sure hope they do, because this is the 4th time i've had to remove my ENTIRE mobo just to re-do this :(
 
Apr 28, 2004
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maybe u have a crappy processor that just naturally runs hot, or your heatsink needs to be finely lapped, or your temp readings are wrong, or the paste ur using sucks.
i would try to lap the heatsink and use as5 next time.
 

SneakyStuff

Diamond Member
Jan 13, 2004
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I'm beginning to think its a combo of the mobo, and the processor itself, anyway tho, I just put the system under load for 2 hours, and the temps never went above 59' C for the diode, and 48' C for the cpu, so i'm content. Mabye i'll get some AS5 next time around, but when winter rolls around, my temps are gonna drop about 6' C anyway, so i'll just deal with it until then.
 

SneakyStuff

Diamond Member
Jan 13, 2004
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haha I didn't "glob" it on, because I was beginning to think that since it's conductive, too much of it was spreading the heat around the CPU, and not bridging it correctly. Anyway, I applied a thin layer only on the slug, and put a droplet in the middle of the slug, so that when I put the HSF down on it, it would spread and fill out. I think i'll just live with whatever temps it gives me this time around, I really don't feel like taking the entire mobo out again. ;) (Although I have gotten SO good at it now I can take the entire thing out, re-apply the silicone, and put it back in in less than 30 minutes! :p, I've reached an all-time low)

EDIT: Well, the cpu has gone down 2' C, from 49' C to 47' C, but the diode has gone up 1' C. Oh well, I guess it's a fair trade-off. As long as it's stable.
 

Jeff7181

Lifer
Aug 21, 2002
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The silicon stuff is crap... use some type of Arctic Silver... whether it's AS2, AS3, or AS5
 

Crucial

Diamond Member
Dec 21, 2000
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I put a bb sized dot in the middle of the slug and install the heatsink. Works fine every time.