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#31 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,951
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[QUOTE=phextwin] I'll beleive you
But what was load? And why were you idling at 51°C ?[/QUOTEThe IHS was concave that why it was idling at 51 degrees. Would you put a load on a CPU that idles at 51? Here is how much that had to be removed to smooth the IHS to level. Click to view full-sized image! Hosted by UGBox Image Store
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Cogito Ergo Bummer. Folding@home 90,000 Club Member. Folding@Home 2,596,000 Points Milestone. Home of the Radiical X-Block www.radiical.com.au |
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#32 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Geelong Velocity:Unknown
Posts: 4,220
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Whoa.
That's truly terrible. I just did a dodgy flatness test with my a64 IHS with a metal ruler, seems okay to me. *shrugs* |
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#33 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Sydney
Posts: 5,668
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Im not accusing you of being dishonest, but 16 degrees seems WAY too much of an improvement for not even removing the IHS
I know the neo2's temp probe is unreliable...hell, a couple of hours ago it reported 18 degrees idle for a few minutes lol. Or perhaps you just had a particularly un-flat IHS or due to a combination of other factors..either way, good on you for going to the trouble of sharing your results and info
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BB'ing journal: http://forums.overclockers.com.au/sh...=726007&page=2 Project supercharged magna: http://forums.overclockers.com.au/sh...d.php?t=626024 |
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#34 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,951
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phextwin,
Now try the same test with some engineers blue on a glass plate.
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Cogito Ergo Bummer. Folding@home 90,000 Club Member. Folding@Home 2,596,000 Points Milestone. Home of the Radiical X-Block www.radiical.com.au |
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#35 | |
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Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Canberra
Posts: 2,492
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Quote:
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#36 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,951
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petfoodonly
That is correct....... but it does not mean that the IHS is flat as FearTec has illustrated with his own CPU. As you have already indicated both companies have problems with CPU heat. Non flatness in IHS may affect only a small number but nevertheless it does occur.
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Cogito Ergo Bummer. Folding@home 90,000 Club Member. Folding@Home 2,596,000 Points Milestone. Home of the Radiical X-Block www.radiical.com.au |
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#37 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Canberra
Posts: 2,492
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lol, I don't think you're taking my point very well.
I'm making the following assumptions: Code:
1) People like fertec and yourself are correct. That is to say when you hold an CPU with an attached IHS in your hand, it it concave. 2) Point 1 is a rule that may have exceptions, not the exception to a rule. 3) AMD and INTEL are both sufficently advanced that they could make a bit of metal flat if they chose to. 4) Both AMD and INTEL realise that 'cool' procesors are 'better' than 'hot' ones. 5) AMD and INTEL would not have to reason to purposly subotage their own CPUs in such a way that they do run hotter than they could. Code:
Despite the concave nature of the IHS when held in your hand, when under typical conditions (ie heat and pressure) the IHS does not form a significant barrier to heat. I hope that is clear. Last edited by petfoodonly; 16th May 2005 at 7:54 AM. |
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#38 |
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D'oh!
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Awesome Adelaide!
Posts: 58,185
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10C reduction after lapping??? And moreso it is only lapping of an IHS. I'm *very* skeptical of the results.
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#39 |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,062
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I will over clock more and update the results.
I do not care if people do not believe me, I did not risk killing my $430 processor to gain a few friends on a forum. I stand by my results.
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#40 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,951
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petfoodonly,
I have no idea what you are getting at with your assumptions so I will leave you to resolve your logic. You may want to follow the suggestion given to phextwin and test your own CPU with some engineers blue and a glass plate then come back with the visual results. MR CHILLED, You have an option like anyone else to review FearTec's data from WebTemp to see where the results come from. The connection to those results is after all in his sig.
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Cogito Ergo Bummer. Folding@home 90,000 Club Member. Folding@Home 2,596,000 Points Milestone. Home of the Radiical X-Block www.radiical.com.au |
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#41 | |
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D'oh!
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Awesome Adelaide!
Posts: 58,185
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Quote:
I don't disbeleive his results and I don't disbeleive him, I just question the results after seeing lapping results over the years, and I'm talking direct cpu lapping, not IHS lapping which would presumably yeild less of a result than cpu lapping. Again, I don't disbeleive his individual results. Last edited by MR CHILLED; 15th May 2005 at 11:14 PM. |
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#42 | ||
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Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Canberra
Posts: 2,492
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Quote:
as per my sig I don't have an IHS on my overclocking CPU. Quote:
It appears in this case that the cooling block was making no direct contact with the CPU die. Heat would have to travel from the die, into the center of the IHS, then to the edge of the IHS, then into the cooling block. In this case the lapping is making contact, not just improving it. Last edited by petfoodonly; 16th May 2005 at 7:55 AM. |
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#43 |
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(Taking a Break)
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,069
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Depends on locality? Secondly I've seen some PRETTY DAMN concave CPUs in my time... =\ I'm thinking about lapping an old 450mhz P3, but the board isn't OC capable, so there'd be no point.
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#44 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: NSW
Posts: 2,951
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petfoodonly,
I really had no intention of sounding dismissive in my last comment to you. The answer to your question of "why" is contained in the philosophy that; These parts (IHS) are mass produced just as the CPU cores are. That there are going to be differences within the mass production. That when a CPU is manufactured it must sit within a tolerance range or it is dicarded. Providing the IHS acts to keep the CPU within a coolant "range" when tested it really does not matter if the IHS is perfectly flat or not. In Intels case perhaps when it became obvious that there were heat issues with the Prescott family that Intel changed the HSF to accomodate the problem and added a raised portion on the centre face of the HSF. This raised disc acting to apply localised pressure which forced down the IHS onto the core and increased the coolant affect. This would remove the need for a flat IHS altogether would it not? In AMD's case the issues of IHS integrity and heat did not present as many complaints as Intel because of the different design technologies within AMD CPU's. Maybe as a result they felt there was no need adjust IHS flatness or to adopt more aggressive cooling measures. Add to this the development of thermal throttling "cool and quiet" technologies and reality that Mr Joe Average out there would be oblivious to his CPU or for that matter any internal computer temps. The bottom line is that only a small, comparativley speaking, group of performance geeks would be affected. Please do not take this as conspiracy theory it is not. It is simply an attempt to explain.
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Cogito Ergo Bummer. Folding@home 90,000 Club Member. Folding@Home 2,596,000 Points Milestone. Home of the Radiical X-Block www.radiical.com.au |
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#45 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Canberra
Posts: 2,492
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Thanks JSE, that sounds pretty reasonable. Does mass production really produce error like that? I don't know.
I suppose this goes to my first and seccond assumptions. Is a concave IHS the exception, or is it the general norm? I guess the only way to find out is to lap more CPUs. |
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