Originally posted by: parkerbink Arctic silver 3 and thanks for proving you are not helpful :
Once again proof that having an A+ certificate doesn't mean squat
Originally posted by: SgtZulu Once again proof that having an A+ certificate doesn't mean squat
I feel somehow the 7+ is conducting electricity into the cpu.
Originally posted by: Sporko
I feel somehow the 7+ is conducting electricity into the cpu.
Since the heatsink is an inert chunk of metal I doubt this to be the case. Unless you have some grossly incorrect mounting problem.
Perhaps just get a professional to do it for you next time.
Originally posted by: parkerbink
Originally posted by: Sporko
I feel somehow the 7+ is conducting electricity into the cpu.
Since the heatsink is an inert chunk of metal I doubt this to be the case. Unless you have some grossly incorrect mounting problem.
Perhaps just get a professional to do it for you next time.
The heatsink in question is pure copper the electrical wiring in your house is copper. inert??? I think not!
Ps I am a professional this is what I do for a living but thanks for the useless input.
Originally posted by: Adul
Thermaltake is all look IMHO.
I prefer thermalright all the way.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
An AMD CPU core weighs perhaps 5 grams and generates upwards of 50W of heat. You do the math on the thermal ramp rate 😉 but it's easy to see that without the emergency shutdown circuitry, you can expect the CPU to be permanently damaged in under 10 seconds if there's nowhere for the heat to go.
I'm still wondering if parkerbink has verified that he is
I don't see where AMD owes you anything, parkerbink. They don't make the heatsink/fan unit that you're blaming your problems on, and using it voids your retail AMD warranty anyway, no ifs, ands or buts. If they warrantied it anyway, that was awfully nice of them.
- using the correct clip, out of the three that the Volcano 7+ comes with
- has the clip oriented so its pressure point is, in fact, over the CPU core, as illustrated by Figure 13 of this guide
- has the heatsink slid as far AWAY from the DIMM slots as the clip permits, to prevent the situation illustrated in Figure 14.
I agree with the tip about throwing certs around 😉 No offense meant, but it sounds rather pompous.
Originally posted by: parkerbink
Ps I am a professional this is what I do for a living but thanks for the useless input.
Originally posted by: wacki
Originally posted by: parkerbink
Ps I am a professional this is what I do for a living but thanks for the useless input.
If all "MCSE professionals" need help installing heatsinks, then Microsoft is in big trouble.
And if all "engineers" need this much help understanding the physics of a copper block, then I gotta wonder how we ever made it to the moon.
No offense to all the other MCSE pro's out there, but seriously how much can "professionals" argue about a block of copper?
You do have to wonder. I know for a fact that Asus C.O.P. will stop an overheating AthlonXP in its tracks. Push power button, *BAM* system shuts itself off. Push power again, *BAM* system shuts itself off. Again, I'm no fanb0y of Thermaltake, but I'm starting to smell a fish here.Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: parkerbink
Originally posted by: Sporko
I feel somehow the 7+ is conducting electricity into the cpu.
Since the heatsink is an inert chunk of metal I doubt this to be the case. Unless you have some grossly incorrect mounting problem.
Perhaps just get a professional to do it for you next time.
The heatsink in question is pure copper the electrical wiring in your house is copper. inert??? I think not!
Ps I am a professional this is what I do for a living but thanks for the useless input.
Begining to sound like a troll. Copper and Aluminum are the 2 most common metals used in heatsinks, they both conduct electricity, unless something is really mucked up in your system(beyond User Error) the chance that your heatsink is shorting out is extremely low.