- Feb 17, 2020
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Not that long ago I came across two Haswell CPUs; an i5 4460 and an i5 4670K - both running uncomfortably hot, even under relatively light load (90 - 100 degrees celsius when stress testing, i.e. Prime95). Rather than buying adequate aftermarket cooling solutions, I went for the more cost efficient option, and decided to delid both CPU:s.
After the delid the 4460 doesn't exceed 72 degrees celsius when stress testing and rarely goes any higher than 60 degrees outside stress testing. So I would consider the result a success.
The 4670K, however, is a different story entirely. Although not worse, there's only marginal improvement (a couple of degrees) and - for some reason the cores differ wildly, which would suggest a botched delid. I have however re(!)delidded the 4670K 3 times by now, with roughly the same result.
In both cases (pun not intended, but appreciated just the same) I've used "liquid metal" for thermal paste.
Any thoughts on this?
After the delid the 4460 doesn't exceed 72 degrees celsius when stress testing and rarely goes any higher than 60 degrees outside stress testing. So I would consider the result a success.
The 4670K, however, is a different story entirely. Although not worse, there's only marginal improvement (a couple of degrees) and - for some reason the cores differ wildly, which would suggest a botched delid. I have however re(!)delidded the 4670K 3 times by now, with roughly the same result.
In both cases (pun not intended, but appreciated just the same) I've used "liquid metal" for thermal paste.
Any thoughts on this?