Originally posted by: John
Since the C2D has a heatspreader, I don't see the benefit of an elongated thin line application vs. to a "bb size in the center" since the weight of the heatsink will spread it out evenly and over the entire core anyhow.
It will spread into a circle that
may not cover the entire surface above the core. In this case, since the core is twice as long as normal, an oval would be better suited... hence the line vs dot.
The whole purpose of having a dot method was to match the
shape of the core without using excess paste, and to fill the gaps of the metal without creating a thick couterproductive cake layer. Now obviously when the shape of the core is completely different, you alter your method a little. You're still accomplishing the same overall goal, just changing the spread pattern to match your core. A line the same width as your dot will just spread into an oval the same width as your circle, but longer to match the longer core. What's the problem? If my core was shaped in a huge "L", I would change the grease pattern a bit as well. Ideally you want a small amount right above the center of the thermal area... in this case the center is a line instead of a single point, because of two cores side by side that put out equal heat.