My socket-7 peltier fried my socket-A T-bird!!! Why?

BaDaBooM

Golden Member
May 3, 2000
1,077
1
0
I tried this and my processor got fried. I think it was the crappy paste the place I bought it from put on it even though I told them not to. I tried to clean it off before-hand though. The peltier had no problems on other processors and I wasn't even overclocking. Is that what caused it to fry or can you not use a socket-7 peltier on a T-bird? I just don't want to fry another one.
 

BaDaBooM

Golden Member
May 3, 2000
1,077
1
0
I've heard about that with peltiers, but I've been using this one on a K6-2 500mhz for quite a while and I didn't have any problems. Why would it only happen now?
 

vryce

Senior member
Oct 30, 1999
429
0
0
Your peltier can only move as much heat as it's rated for. A T-bird is going to dump a lot more heat than a K6- so if you put a peltier on your bird that's rated at a wattage less than the heat the chip throws off, it becomes a heat barrier. Your bird can't dump all the heat, and it dies...

Use a program like Radiate! to find out approximately what your maximum heat dissipation is in watts, and then make sure that your peltier can move at LEAST that much heat.
 

BaDaBooM

Golden Member
May 3, 2000
1,077
1
0
Ok, well, that makes sense. I suppose I should get a new cooling device when I replace my processor then. Any suggestions? I may try to overclock later. Anybody know where to get a peltier or equivilant cooling solution that is rated for a 1ghz T-bird?
 

Howard

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
47,982
11
81
I wouldn't suggest it. I think 80W peltiers are the conventional max, and that's coming too close for my taste. Plus with the additional heat you'd almost have to go with a water-cooling setup.
 

lotust

Diamond Member
Aug 19, 2000
9,025
0
76
OIC now,, he he dum @ss me. I thought you were using a T bird pelt on a socket 7 cpu.


vryce hit the nail on the head I think