• We should now be fully online following an overnight outage. Apologies for any inconvenience, we do not expect there to be any further issues.

Question Thermal Compound in 2020

STERKOFF

Member
Jul 8, 2019
27
2
41
Going to be doing a new build once I get my hands on one of the new Ryzen CPU's (a separate topic, I know) and was curious what is the go-to thermal compound these days? Not looking for crazy, expensive, bleeding-edge stuff. For example I used to use AC5 years and years ago and my last was the Noctua tube that came with their heatsink. Maybe there really isn't much between them these days, IDK....
 

Avalon

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2001
7,571
178
106
Recently had to do some research myself on that topic when I was building my Ryzen 5600X machine. Check this out:


I wound up going with the Noctua NT-H2 because it was pretty performant but also reasonably priced. Works great and is easy to apply.
 

damian101

Senior member
Aug 11, 2020
291
107
86
You can't go wrong with Arctic MX-2 or MX-4.
Paying more for thermal paste gives you barely better performance, unless you go for liquid metal.
For CPUs with heatspreader thermal compound isn't very important anyway. For direct-die cooling I normally use liquid metal pads.
 
  • Like
Reactions: killster1

STERKOFF

Member
Jul 8, 2019
27
2
41
Recently had to do some research myself on that topic when I was building my Ryzen 5600X machine. Check this out:


I wound up going with the Noctua NT-H2 because it was pretty performant but also reasonably priced. Works great and is easy to apply.

Thanks! Looks like the NT-H2 offers good performance at reasonable price. Maybe will watch for a BF deal on the Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut, but otherwise looks like either the NT-H2 or PK-2 will easily meet my modest needs.
 

thigobr

Senior member
Sep 4, 2016
247
189
116
Gelid GC-Extreme is also a good option and usually on top of comparison charts
 

Campy

Senior member
Jun 25, 2010
785
171
116
I use Kryonaut, easy to apply and performs well. Just get a 1g tube it's plenty enough for many applications
 

DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
22,946
13,032
136
Kryonaut is pretty good stuff. Just avoid heating it above 85C. That's where it tends to dry out.
 

Hail The Brain Slug

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 2005
3,884
3,324
146
GC extreme is king of longevity with performance.

If you want your paste application to last 5 years it's an obvious choice.

I've observed it lasting 5 years without any detectable change in performance, no drying out, no running out.

Kryonaut performs slightly better but doesn't last as long.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Drazick