Originally posted by: Heller
1. 200 Grit sheet of sandpaper
1. 400 Grit sheet of sandpaper
1. 800 Grit sheet of sandpaper
Flat surface (glass)
1. Tuniq Tower
am i missing anything?
200 grit might not be low enough to make for an easy task of beveling the edges of your tuniq. Your patience will determine this.
For me I beveled one Tuniq with 220 grit, and it was excrutiatingly slow going. I bought a 70 grit sanding block for $3 at AutoZone (it's a like a kitchen sponge coated on all surfaces with this green abrasive). This make for quick and painless beveling, <5 minutes.
From experience I doubt you'll see a noteworthy improvement by going above 800 grit. I tried 1000, 1200, 1500, and 2000 grits and my temps were the same as 800 grit. I didn't test anything with less than 800 grit, so maybe even 800 is a waste of effort.
If you want that shiny mirror-like finish for sense of job satisfaction then you must go to 1000 grit minimum.
If you do not lap your CPU then expect questionably returns from your Tuniq lapping efforts. I've lapped convex and concave Tuniqs, so no rule of thumb there as to which you have right now. All my quads (6) were convex (bump-up in the center).
If you are lapping an already concave Tuniq then your temps could actually get worse if you do not lap your liekly convex CPU. If your Tuniq is currently convex then lapping it alone will likely improve your temps.
Just food for thought, I wouldn't recommend doing any more than you are comfortable doing. It took me years of reading about other's adventures with lapping before I worked up the courage to lap something myself. Once I did it the first time (very gingerly too) then I realized just how abusive you can be with the CPU and Heatsink to no ill-effect.