I recently installed this heatsink on an ASUS P8Z68-V PRO motherboard (socket 1155), following the instructions for the socket 1156 chipset. My understanding is that the mounting is identical for sockets 1155 and 1156.
It was not possible to fully secure the backplate (Intel Step 4 - http://www.prolimatech.com/en/products/detail.asp?id=155&subid=413#showtab) without the use of the LGA 775 spacer. The issue was that the rivets protrude too far through the holes in the motherboard when the backplate is not raised by the LGA spacer. As a result, when the double headed screws are used to secure the backplate, the screw heads are too short and can be screwed into the rivets all the way. I found that 2 of the 4 sides of the backplate wobbled even after all four double headed screws had been fully secured. I am not sure if the issue is the thickness of the ASUS motherboard (perhaps it is too thin or the socket itself has less depth). In either case, use of the LGA 775 spacer resolved this issue and created a secure fit.
My question is this: are there any risks or problems with use of the LGA 775 spacer on a socket 1155 motherboard? I am not sure how else to secure the backplate without some additional spacing between the backplate and the motherboard. The LGA spacer does the trick but if there is another, more appropriate solution, I'm all ears.
Thanks!
It was not possible to fully secure the backplate (Intel Step 4 - http://www.prolimatech.com/en/products/detail.asp?id=155&subid=413#showtab) without the use of the LGA 775 spacer. The issue was that the rivets protrude too far through the holes in the motherboard when the backplate is not raised by the LGA spacer. As a result, when the double headed screws are used to secure the backplate, the screw heads are too short and can be screwed into the rivets all the way. I found that 2 of the 4 sides of the backplate wobbled even after all four double headed screws had been fully secured. I am not sure if the issue is the thickness of the ASUS motherboard (perhaps it is too thin or the socket itself has less depth). In either case, use of the LGA 775 spacer resolved this issue and created a secure fit.
My question is this: are there any risks or problems with use of the LGA 775 spacer on a socket 1155 motherboard? I am not sure how else to secure the backplate without some additional spacing between the backplate and the motherboard. The LGA spacer does the trick but if there is another, more appropriate solution, I'm all ears.
Thanks!