• We should now be fully online following an overnight outage. Apologies for any inconvenience, we do not expect there to be any further issues.

HeatSink compound question

DarkLord98

Junior Member
Jan 26, 2001
12
0
0
I am getting a new cpu and hs/fan within the next week. I was wondering if the hs compound was absolutely necessary when attaching the hs/fan to the cpu? This is for a thunderbird 850, running at 200fsb. After applying it, will it be very hard to remove the hs from the cpu, should the need arise?
 

mechBgon

Super Moderator<br>Elite Member
Oct 31, 1999
30,699
1
0
It's highly recommended. Something is needed to transmit the heat efficiently from the CPU core to the heatsink. In a perfect world, both surfaces would be utterly smooth and flat, with 100% contact at the molecular level, and nothing would be needed betwen them. As it is, the three methods of conduction are thermal grease (aka heatsink compound, thermal paste, etc), a thermal pad, and a special gummy stuff that is like a hybrid between the two and which turns semi-viscous at elevated temperatures. AMD's official recommendation is for the last of these, perhaps because it will conform to the gap if the heatsink is not quite straight.

I guess there's thermal epoxy too, but that is not a good idea for a CPU, since you would not be able to access the CPU-release lever afterwards.

Thermal grease won't glue on your heatsink, although it might take a bit of twisting to break the viscous suction of the very-thin layer of grease. It can be wiped off with a cloth and some rubbing alcohol. Hope that is a help. :)