S
SlitheryDee
I had a problem with my computer yesterday which required me to clear my CMOS by removing the battery from my motherboard. To get to the battery I was forced to take out my video card. My video card HSF (XFX Geforce 6600GT AGP) has two pins attached to opposite corners which hold it down against the GPU die. If you were to apply pressure to one of the corners which do not have pins, then you'd find that the HSF is free to rock back and forth along this axis. This is what I inadvertently did while pulling my card from it's slot.
I noticed the movement and was concerned that I might have compromised the effectiveness of the thermal paste between the HSF and GPU. I removed the pins, cleaned both parts with 91% isopropyl alcohol, and smeared on some Antec Formula 5 Silver Thermal Compound (following Antec's instructions for CPUs).
After I reinstalled the card I found that I couldn't run any 3D applications (benchmarks, games, whatever) for more than 30 seconds or so before the computer would crash to a black screen, forcing me to do a hard reboot.
Sounded like a heat issue initially and I wondered if maybe I had applied so much thermal paste that it was acting as an insulator instead of it's intended function.
Does this look like too much?
After cleaning the die a second time I noticed that 2 of the corners appear slightly chipped. I believe that this happened when I removed the card from the computer.
Angle shot of GPU
Overhead shot
The chips are clearly visible in the pics.
My questions are:
Do the chips look like enough to kill the card?
Could it possibly be overheating due to a shoddy thermal pasting job? (obviously I'm hoping for this one)
All input would be appreciated.
Clean heatsink with chip marks
Update:
I took the suggestions of several people and reduced the amount of thermal paste that I used.
Before spreading
After spreading
The problems still persists, thus I think that I have effectively killed this card. I see no reason to look into advanced cooling solutions because there is no guarantee that they will solve the problem. I have received an RMA number from XFX and will be sending the card back. If they find that I have voided my warranty with my incessant tinkering then I will have the option to pay them to repair the card. Depending on the price, that may not be a bad option.
Anyways, thanks for all the help guys. I really appreciate it.
I noticed the movement and was concerned that I might have compromised the effectiveness of the thermal paste between the HSF and GPU. I removed the pins, cleaned both parts with 91% isopropyl alcohol, and smeared on some Antec Formula 5 Silver Thermal Compound (following Antec's instructions for CPUs).
After I reinstalled the card I found that I couldn't run any 3D applications (benchmarks, games, whatever) for more than 30 seconds or so before the computer would crash to a black screen, forcing me to do a hard reboot.
Sounded like a heat issue initially and I wondered if maybe I had applied so much thermal paste that it was acting as an insulator instead of it's intended function.
Does this look like too much?
After cleaning the die a second time I noticed that 2 of the corners appear slightly chipped. I believe that this happened when I removed the card from the computer.
Angle shot of GPU
Overhead shot
The chips are clearly visible in the pics.
My questions are:
Do the chips look like enough to kill the card?
Could it possibly be overheating due to a shoddy thermal pasting job? (obviously I'm hoping for this one)
All input would be appreciated.
Clean heatsink with chip marks
Update:
I took the suggestions of several people and reduced the amount of thermal paste that I used.
Before spreading
After spreading
The problems still persists, thus I think that I have effectively killed this card. I see no reason to look into advanced cooling solutions because there is no guarantee that they will solve the problem. I have received an RMA number from XFX and will be sending the card back. If they find that I have voided my warranty with my incessant tinkering then I will have the option to pay them to repair the card. Depending on the price, that may not be a bad option.
Anyways, thanks for all the help guys. I really appreciate it.