- Nov 22, 2001
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You may recall the thread reporting surprisingly high PWM temps using Quads on some Abit P35 boards. The question was posed, should we consider PWM temps into the cooling equation? We monitor NB and CPU temps and spend big bucks on exotic cooling solutions, but we typically leave mofset cooling stock. Many motherboard failures are attributed to power components failure.
Prior to my build, I removed the heatsink from my Abit IP35 Pro and found very poor thermal contact due to a slightly bent heatpipe and inadequate retention pressure from the plastic push-pins. I straightened and reapplied the assembly using the stock mofset thermal pad and push pins. Testing a Q6600 @ 334 x 9 with dual instances of Orthos caused PWM temps to spike to 75-76 degrees, and that was in a well ventilated case.
My goal was to reduce PWM temps using better thermal material, a slight increase in retention pressure, and active cooling at the Mofset. I replaced the push-pins with bolts, used Arcitc Silver Ceramique on the mofsets, and installed a 40mm fan.
I made a list for anyone interested in the bolt mod. It's not terribly difficult, but it can be a pain. There's very little clearance on the nut side. I intended on using a nut driver to hold the nuts in place but couldn't. I had to use a pair of needle nose pliers to hold them as I tightened the scews.
Bolts were necessary because the one-piece heatsink assembly wouldn't "lay flat" with push-pin retention strength. Bolts may not be necessary in your case. Simply using better thermal paste and a fan may help. Bolts this small are hard to find locally. I found them online:
PARTS DETAIL:
6ea Part # 5313, 4-40 x 5/8 18-8 Stainless Machine Screw
Bolt Alternative, Part # 9623, 4-40 x 9/16 is slightly shorter
6ea Part # 4107, 4-40 18-8 Stainless Hex Lock Nut Nylon Insert
6ea #4 x 1/4" fiber washers from Home Depot
Arctic Silver Creamique or other non-conductive paste
40mm fan
PICS DETAIL:
Bolts at mofset
Bolts at the NB
Bolts at the SB
Underside- note washers are just the right size
Bolted down Mofset
Bolted down NB
Bolted down SB
40mm fan- Note zip tie, one is all I used, but fan is snug against Ultra 120x base and is secure
I didn't get scientific on torque; I just knew not to overtighten and made sure I had the same number of threads for each respective screw. Place mobo on a flat surface with scews installed, apply thermal interface, apply heatsink, apply nuts and hand tighten. Use best method to hold nuts while screwing in screws. Don't overtighten! After you see the screw head has tightened onto the washer and the nut is flush, you're just about there.
RESULTS:
Q6600 @ 334 x 9, 1.362 in bios, NB @ 1.29, CPU VTT @ 1.23. Orthos dual instance small FFT's for 30 minutes. Latest version of uGuru.
Stock motherboard idle:
CPU = 36
System = 36
PWM = 52
Stock motherboard load:
CPU = 55
System = 37
PWM = 75
Modded motherboard idle:
CPU = 36
System = 42
PWM = 43
Modded motherboard load:
CPU = 55
System = 43
PWM = 60
PWM idle temp dropped 9 degees. PWM load temp dropped 15 degrees! Note however my northbridge temps increased 6 degrees. I attribute this to improved thermal exchage at the mofset. Heatsinks are connected with a heatpipe. The heatpipe is either carrying more heat away from the mofset heatsink, or allowing less heat to come from the northbridge. In any case, northbridge temps are still quite reasonable. Was it worth it? Depends on who you ask. I didn't hope for a higher overclock and am happy where I'm at. I do like to run components as cool as possible however. So for me it was worth it. Wish I'd done it at build time however. No one likes pulling a board to put it right back in!
*EDIT*
Orthos was crashing at 340x9 with same voltage prior to mod but now runs flawlessly. I initially attributed crash to lack of voltage and lowered FSB because I didn't want to raise voltage. Lower PWM temp appears to have helped stability as well. Sticking to 3.06GHz until I see a need for more.
NOTES
This is not necessarily an Abit issue. Abit's uGuru reports PWM temps, the only reason high PWM temps caught the eye. Abit P35 boards have proven to be quite stable and overclockable.
Regarding testing method, yes there are better temp tools out there. uGuru worked well enough for this test.
Prior to my build, I removed the heatsink from my Abit IP35 Pro and found very poor thermal contact due to a slightly bent heatpipe and inadequate retention pressure from the plastic push-pins. I straightened and reapplied the assembly using the stock mofset thermal pad and push pins. Testing a Q6600 @ 334 x 9 with dual instances of Orthos caused PWM temps to spike to 75-76 degrees, and that was in a well ventilated case.
My goal was to reduce PWM temps using better thermal material, a slight increase in retention pressure, and active cooling at the Mofset. I replaced the push-pins with bolts, used Arcitc Silver Ceramique on the mofsets, and installed a 40mm fan.
I made a list for anyone interested in the bolt mod. It's not terribly difficult, but it can be a pain. There's very little clearance on the nut side. I intended on using a nut driver to hold the nuts in place but couldn't. I had to use a pair of needle nose pliers to hold them as I tightened the scews.
Bolts were necessary because the one-piece heatsink assembly wouldn't "lay flat" with push-pin retention strength. Bolts may not be necessary in your case. Simply using better thermal paste and a fan may help. Bolts this small are hard to find locally. I found them online:
PARTS DETAIL:
6ea Part # 5313, 4-40 x 5/8 18-8 Stainless Machine Screw
Bolt Alternative, Part # 9623, 4-40 x 9/16 is slightly shorter
6ea Part # 4107, 4-40 18-8 Stainless Hex Lock Nut Nylon Insert
6ea #4 x 1/4" fiber washers from Home Depot
Arctic Silver Creamique or other non-conductive paste
40mm fan
PICS DETAIL:
Bolts at mofset
Bolts at the NB
Bolts at the SB
Underside- note washers are just the right size
Bolted down Mofset
Bolted down NB
Bolted down SB
40mm fan- Note zip tie, one is all I used, but fan is snug against Ultra 120x base and is secure
I didn't get scientific on torque; I just knew not to overtighten and made sure I had the same number of threads for each respective screw. Place mobo on a flat surface with scews installed, apply thermal interface, apply heatsink, apply nuts and hand tighten. Use best method to hold nuts while screwing in screws. Don't overtighten! After you see the screw head has tightened onto the washer and the nut is flush, you're just about there.
RESULTS:
Q6600 @ 334 x 9, 1.362 in bios, NB @ 1.29, CPU VTT @ 1.23. Orthos dual instance small FFT's for 30 minutes. Latest version of uGuru.
Stock motherboard idle:
CPU = 36
System = 36
PWM = 52
Stock motherboard load:
CPU = 55
System = 37
PWM = 75
Modded motherboard idle:
CPU = 36
System = 42
PWM = 43
Modded motherboard load:
CPU = 55
System = 43
PWM = 60
PWM idle temp dropped 9 degees. PWM load temp dropped 15 degrees! Note however my northbridge temps increased 6 degrees. I attribute this to improved thermal exchage at the mofset. Heatsinks are connected with a heatpipe. The heatpipe is either carrying more heat away from the mofset heatsink, or allowing less heat to come from the northbridge. In any case, northbridge temps are still quite reasonable. Was it worth it? Depends on who you ask. I didn't hope for a higher overclock and am happy where I'm at. I do like to run components as cool as possible however. So for me it was worth it. Wish I'd done it at build time however. No one likes pulling a board to put it right back in!
*EDIT*
Orthos was crashing at 340x9 with same voltage prior to mod but now runs flawlessly. I initially attributed crash to lack of voltage and lowered FSB because I didn't want to raise voltage. Lower PWM temp appears to have helped stability as well. Sticking to 3.06GHz until I see a need for more.
NOTES
This is not necessarily an Abit issue. Abit's uGuru reports PWM temps, the only reason high PWM temps caught the eye. Abit P35 boards have proven to be quite stable and overclockable.
Regarding testing method, yes there are better temp tools out there. uGuru worked well enough for this test.