On 03/07/13 17:41, Renato Golin wrote:
On 3 July 2013 17:22, Mans Rullgard <mans.rullg...@linaro.org
<mailto:mans.rullg...@linaro.org>> wrote:

    I repeat, the 4460 will run at 1.2GHz indefinitely without thermal
    management.


My mistake, I said 1.3GHz when it was actually 1.2GHz. So, at 1.2GHz, it
freezes every few hours on full load on both 4430 and 4460.

linaro@linaro-panda-01:~$ cat
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_max_freq
1200000

Now what?


keep lowering the clock limit (.../cpufreq/scaling_max_freq) until you get stability. If you don't, then it isn't a heating problem.

Remember that manufacturers match the form of packaging to the expected TDP of the intended usage environment (to keep product costs down). In a mobile part that probably means relatively cheap plastic package because a hot chip would burn a hole in your pocket -- literally. The package almost certainly doesn't have a high thermal conductivity from the chip to the external surface so while a heat sink might help, it won't be as effective as with other packaging options.

Chips expected to dissipate large amounts of power normally have a metal pad on the package so that a heat sink with thermal grease will make a good thermal contact.

R.



_______________________________________________
linaro-toolchain mailing list
linaro-toolchain@lists.linaro.org
http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-toolchain

Reply via email to