VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,587
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I heard from a friend that is a retired HVAC tech, that he was reading that heatpipes can degrade over a longer period of time. If your existing heatsink has heatpipes, then maybe it needs to be replaced?
Heatpipes are a lot more than just "copper tubes". There's a vapor inside them, there's wicking along the tube, etc.What?? Sorry but that doesn't seem to make any sense. The copper becomes less conductive over time?
Heatpipes are a lot more than just "copper tubes". There's a vapor inside them, there's wicking along the tube, etc.
Some people are just clueless, I guess.Also, if you do have a spare HSF try it. 99% of success in fixing a problem is a process of elimination doing the easy and cheap things first. Never understood asking for advice and then arguing about the solutions offered with "Why would it matter?" "Nothing has changed." "It worked fine before" etc...
Some people are just clueless, I guess.
Take one of my friends. I was helping him troubleshoot an internet connection problem. He's a Firefox user. I asked him to try accessing the internet or that site with IE. Instead of just doing it, he argues with me, and launches into a tirade about why IE sucks, and he'll never use IE. Like I was asking him to switch permanently, rather than just for the purpose of tech support. You know, process of elimination.
Some people are just clueless, I guess.
Easy process of elimination for overheating. Blow out the dust, leave the side panel off, point a housefan at it and run it. If the newly seated HSF is actually turning and still overheats its probably the CPU. If it doesn't overheat you've got your answer - its not getting proper cooling either from the fans you have or possibly a constricted area you have the case in (not enough air flow). Also, if you do have a spare HSF try it. 99% of success in fixing a problem is a process of elimination doing the easy and cheap things first. Never understood asking for advice and then arguing about the solutions offered with "Why would it matter?" "Nothing has changed." "It worked fine before" etc...
I will say, your 'easy process' you describe is not easy at all - quite impractical - in this situation, despite your assumption. Your general principle that isolation is important is correct, but not your assertion that every approach to isolation anyone suggests is correct and should be followed blindly. Let's agree to disagree civilly and thanks for the suggestion to help.
Blow out the dust, leave the side panel off, point a housefan at it
I will say, your 'easy process' you describe is not easy at all - quite impractical - in this situation
From what I can tell, and what I have suggested to you for roughly 3-4 months now I believe, is the same thing he recommended for you to do; Clean out the dust to know for sure.
So is that the part you are unable to do for whatever reason? If that's the case, I will just stay out of your threads where you are having issues.
And to be clear, I am not saying that with any kind of malice or as a "threat". However, since I believe your issue is related to that, I don't want to suggest it anymore if you are unable to do that aspect. It would save my time having to suggest it, and your time not having to answer it over and over.
I think your time estimate is off, but no, cleaning out the dust isn't the part that's impractical, and thanks for suggesting what you think will help.
And you could be right. Your CPU at this point can be damaged. However, CPUs along with RAM, tend to out-live other components. As long as they aren't overclocked too much and have sufficient cooling, they will last a long time.
However, from the pictures you shared, your case was loaded with dust. You clearly had significant dust in your heatsink and fan. So really the question is this: Is your CPU overheating from the dust blocking the heat from dissipating, or is the CPU now damaged from that happening?
The 100% sure fire way to know that is either to clean out the dust or replace the CPU. For me, I'd rather blow out the dust before spending money on a new CPU.
