Q: Ok I got my heat sink and fan today and tomorrow I get my CPU and motherboard. I read the instructions on the Arctic Silver 2 official site, and says that before the heatsink you need some Arctic silver over the first part of the heatsink in contact with the CPU to fill the microscopic valleys. Then wipe. Is this really necessary? My heatsink does not even come with a thermal pad, so I need to do this?
Best Answer: The case is designed to store the parts, because that is where they sit anyway once you build the computer. I have stored spare parts from motherboards to graphics cards to processors. as long as the components are stored in a safe fashion (i.e. so they won't get physically damaged), it should be fine.
on another note, you should follow the instructions given by the thermal compound's manufacturer, which can be found online if not included with the product. With arctic silver in particular, it is a metal based compound, so you do not want it to touch the motherboard once the heat sink is properly mounted, as it conducts electricity. also, you do NOT ever mix compounds. before you apply the AS5, you should remove the compound already on the heat sink prior to installation.
I am studying to get my A+ computer Cert, so this info should be mostly correct.
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Re:I usually do it the quick'n'dirty way – just squeeze a long glob along the middle of the core and let the pressure direct it where it needs to go. It doesn't overflow over the edges of the core much, and I always get good performance out of it. When I take the heatsink off for whatever, then I wipe it off. That method so far is keeping my 750@866 T-bird at 38C with a cheap $10 socket A heatsink. And the case is closed too.
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Re:<< Ok I got my heatsink and fan today and tomorrow I get my cpu and motherboard. I was reading up on the arctic silver 2 instructions on the official site, and it says that before you install the heatsink you should first spread some arctic silver over the part of the heatsink that will come into contact with the cpu to fill in the microscopic vallies. Then wipe it off. Is this really necessary? My heatsink didn't even come with a thermal pad, so do I need to do this? >>
I think its neither harmful nor necessary. I followed the instruction step per step, including getting everything degreased and sparkling clean, then spreading the stuff without using my finger. Turns out it makes no difference compared to my standard thermal grease. It wouldn't hurt to use ASII, but if you don't have it yet, I'd just use standard stuff.
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Re:I really don't think that's necessary. I prefer to put a thin layer of AS on the CPU die and mount the HSF as I normally would. Then I take the HSF off and look at where the die was making contact. You should see a clear square or rectangular AS "print". If you don't, your CPU isn't making level contact with the HS and you could end up burning your money. If everything looks good, scrape it off with an exacto knife or credit card, apply a very small amount to make up for what you lost then carefully remount just like you did before. There's no excuse for burning up a CPU in my book…
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Re:When you wipe it off your HSF, you CAN see a big blotch left, no matter how hard you scrub…so it really IS filling in all those gaps. I think it's worth it to follow their instructions all the way through.
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Re:I sometimes do, it doesn't really matter. But it only takes a few seconds so why not
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