• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Need some help from artic silver users....

8008S

Banned
Well, I my duron has been offline for awhile since when i put Artic silver, my temp actually rose :Q. I was wondering how you applied it and how many times did you have to reapply it to work properly. Thanks

8008S
 


<< Here's a very logical and proven explanation why you may not &quot;show&quot; a lower temp with better/silver greases.

First of all, nothing changes the heat flow/power dissipation of the cpu except the cpu itself and app/s running. And all heat generated is removed, but higher thermal resistance cooling systems force temp in cpu to rise in order to force the heat out, as &quot;Temp drop&quot; is the motive force in heat transfer. Cpu temp rises until heat out equals
heat generated...that's the physics.

But the cpu/hs heat transfer path has several components with their individual thermal resistances, and yes, the silver grease lowers the &quot;overall&quot; resistance, so it therefore lowers the cpu internal temp and the cpu case top
temp on the &quot;cpu side&quot; of the lower resistance silver grease interface.

But it &quot;does not&quot; lower the hs resistance. So for the same heat transfer, any sensor measuring hs surface or related temp will &quot;not be lower&quot;. In fact, it will be slightly
WARMER, because the lower resistance of the hs heat flow branch causes a bit more, (of total heat), to flow thru the hs rather than thru the constant resistance branch of the pins...a minor &quot;secondary/negative feedback effect&quot;.

Hope it's clear now that you can't measure the effectiveness of an interface material UNLESS you can measure the temp on the cpu side of the interface...which is a practical impossibility for most cases. Like real estate...&quot;location&quot; is everything.

You could try reading internal thermal diodes on Intel chips, as they are on the cpu side of interface. Diodes are not &quot;accurate&quot;, but they are &quot;repeatable&quot;...ie, tell same lies every day.
John C.
>>




http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview.cfm?catid=28&amp;threadid=231273
 
Back
Top