Very little if this thread is related to pfSense. Please stay on topic.
-- Jim > On Jul 22, 2014, at 17:32, Chris Bagnall <pfse...@lists.minotaur.cc> wrote: > >> On 22/7/14 11:17 pm, Nickolai Leschov wrote: >> I didn't notice this page. So it looks like it's some kind of thermal paste >> allows for adequate thermal conductivity between the CPU/south bridge and >> the aluminum heat spreader, but the heat spreader is in dry contact with >> the case? > > The one I've just installed here in my home office has 'sticky' thermal pads > on both sides of the aluminium heat spreader, and sticks to both the chips > and the base of the chassis. > > It gets warm in use, but not uncomfortably hot. Ambient temperature is about > 22C at this time of year. > >> Now, how is the board held in place, inside the enclosure? Is it held in >> place by 'screws and hex nuts'? > > 4 screws in the corners which go into binding posts on the chassis, not > particularly dissimilar from most PC motherboards into cases. > >> What is the thing in the second-to-last picture near the thumb of the >> presenter's right hand: is it the SIM card tray? Is it accessible from >> outside, after the installation? > > There is a SIM card tray, and like the SD card slot, no, it's not accessible > externally after installation. > > (as a matter of curiosity, does pfSense support this SIM card slot for > anything 'interesting'? - one presumes it would need to be used in > conjunction with a miniPCIe radio card of some persuasion) > > Kind regards, > > Chris > -- > This email is made from 100% recycled electrons > _______________________________________________ > List mailing list > List@lists.pfsense.org > https://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list _______________________________________________ List mailing list List@lists.pfsense.org https://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list