[CentOS] died again

SilverTip257 silvertip257 at gmail.com
Wed Dec 4 01:55:29 UTC 2013


On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 5:59 PM, Louis Lagendijk <louis at fazant.net> wrote:

> On Tue, 2013-12-03 at 15:16 -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote:
> > On Wed, 27 Nov 2013, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:
> >
> > > Michael Hennebry wrote:
> > >> On Wed, 27 Nov 2013, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:
> >
> > >>> One thing I've never done, or thought of until now, was whether the
> > >>> thermal grease between the CPU and the heat sink had dried out. If
> it's
> > >>> running hot, that's a possibility, so you might clean that off and
> put
> > >>> on some new (a buck or so at any computer parts store). Doesn't need
> > > much -
> > >>> the force of tightening the heat sink will spread it much farther
> than
> > >>> you expect it to, and you don't want it coming out the sides.
> > >>
> > >> "the force of tightening the heat sink" frightens me silly,
> > >> but I suppose that would be better than a dead CPU fan.
> > >> My recollection is that that does not come off.
> > >
> > > Not to worry. It will probably be a lever that you push down and it
> > > catches. I doubt it's like in some servers, where you screw it on...
> and
> > > even in that case, you screw it till you feel it stop turning.
> >
> In any case: check the fans first. There may also be a lot of dirt on
> the heat sink. These are much more likely culprits than the thermal
> paste.
>
> > If thermal grease is the problem,
> > how do I find out and how do I clean off the old stuff?
> > I've read that just adding more is not a good idea.
> > If I add to much thermal paste, what do I do about it?
>

A drop about the size of a pea.

Use the heat sink to spread it out that way there won't be any air bubbles.
Just put the heat sink on top, then use the clips (or whatever fasteners
you took off) to secure the heat sink (and it spreads the thermal paste
too).

*If* you put too much, you'll probably have some gushing out the sides.
 I've not had problems when I put a dot/dab the size of a pea.

>
> If everything else fails you can try to replace the old thermal paste. I
> It seems unlikely that this is the cause of your problems. I have seen
> quite a number of issues with fans and dirty heat sinks. None that I can
> remember of bad thermal paste. I may have seen one case where there was
> none at all (assembly mistake).
> Remember that the paste is only to be used to fill up the really small
> unevenness between heat sink and heat spreader on the processor. Unless
> you are overclocking I would not expect much difference from a new
> thermal paste
>
> As mark already pointed out a little alcohol is very helpful to remove
> old paste. Use a lint free cloth to remove it.
> Then just put a little new paste on in the middle of the processor and
> use a credit card to spread it out as thin as possible. The credit card
> is flexible enough to follow the surface accurately. And don't let the
> paste spread out from the sides of the heat spreader.
>

Don't spread the thermal paste with anything - there's no need.  Use the
heat sink!  No air bubbles/pockets!


>
> Louis
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS at centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>



-- 
---~~.~~---
Mike
//  SilverTip257  //



More information about the CentOS mailing list