Most CPU fans I've seen come with a pad of conductive [something] which
goes between the processor and the heatsink. I would think that something
like this would be essential, given that the surfaces are probably not
perfectly flat (on a nano scale).
I think it's more a case of sheer
frank wrote,
Rick Hawkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
They work wonderfully. I have a k6-166 running at 210/83
quite happilly. However, it needs some cooling at this
speed; until i get something more than this cheesy $2 fan,
I need to keep the side off to compile (but not at
166/66).
On Fri, 28 Nov 1997 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A fried cpu is not always just dead. I've seen one that made funny things
with
interrupts, and that was hard to diagnose.
This is why I always put heatsink goop on the chip, without it the
heatsink/fan doesn't do much. The problems you can get
Most CPU fans I've seen come with a pad of conductive [something] which
goes between the processor and the heatsink. I would think that something
like this would be essential, given that the surfaces are probably not
perfectly flat (on a nano scale).
I think it's more a case of sheer
On Thu, 27 Nov 1997, Frank Sergeant wrote:
[ snip ]
:
: Does anyone have any experience with this? In
: the old days, voltage regulators and power transistors
: and such hot-running ICs usually were not just attached
: to their heatsinks bare, but were smeared with
: heatsink/thermal
Rick Hawkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
They work wonderfully. I have a k6-166 running at 210/83
quite happilly. However, it needs some cooling at this
speed; until i get something more than this cheesy $2 fan,
I need to keep the side off to compile (but not at
166/66).
How is the
Most CPU fans I've seen come with a pad of conductive [something] which
goes between the processor and the heatsink. I would think that something
like this would be essential, given that the surfaces are probably not
perfectly flat (on a nano scale).
On Thu, 27 Nov 1997, Frank Sergeant wrote:
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