By "another site" I assume you mean one random message board post.
Why don't people check sources? Geez.
OK, sorry to sound stupid, but could someone explain exactly what these abbreviations mean and exactly what Intel and the tech site did? I am not at all familiar with the internal parts of a CPU. Dont know what TIM and IHS mean even. Sorry for my lack of knowledge, but I am a bit confused by what is going on here.
A while ago, another site removed the IHS and found that there was no temperature difference without it
So who's gonna man up and pop the lid off their Ivy CPU?
We need verification. Just like I was the first one to bios flash my 7850 we need a pioneer to prove that this works.
I haven't seen him post in the longest time. He's the "Administrator" now. :whiste:This looks like a job for IDC()🙂
Intel has no good reason to do that ..I'm just hoping they put soldered TIM back under the hood when Haswell-E rolls around.
There is a difference between the two tests though. The PCWatch(recent) test put the IHS back on after they applied the thermal paste, while the first test with IHS off did bare die testing.
Without filing down plastic/metal around the socket, after removing the socket, you wouldnt get enough pressure on an IHSless cpu, unless using a waterblock designed for bare die cooling that fits in that smaller area.
Also cant compare tim1 (die to IHS) results to tim2 (between IHS/block), different animals, tim1 much more important, and much more effect on gradient given surface area is much smaller.
That being said, I expected more of 10C difference max per 100W, but who knows. Tempted to buy a 3570 non-k model and run with high vcore, then change out tim1 and try again.
Simple non foam double sided tape would work, like what PC Watch did. If you're certain on reassembling everything afterwards permanently, use epoxy.I just am not sure how to go about re-attaching the IHS. Any suggestions?
Simple non foam double sided tape would work, like what PC Watch did. If you're certain on reassembling everything afterwards permanently, use epoxy.
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I'm thinking before I do this I should probably buy a spare 3770k just in case. If I destroy mine, I won't be without a PC. If I don't, I can return for a refund minus restocking fee.
Intel's $20 overclocking warranty wouldn't happen to cover de-lidding the IHS, would it? :biggrin: