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sam unwise
this is going to be my first home built pc and i don't plan on overclocking.
thanks for any help
thanks for any help
sam unwise said:this is going to be my first home built pc and i don't plan on overclocking.
thanks for any help
this is going to be my first home built pc and i don't plan on overclocking.
thanks for any help
from the said:thanks for the reply,thankfuly i havent bought a celeron,i was
considering it till i read the reviews in this and other newsgroups
sorry to be a bother but could you give me the name of the pink
thermal pads,i hadnt heard of that before and am trying to pick up
things as i go along here
sam unwise said:thanks for the reply,thankfuly i havent bought a celeron,i was
considering it till i read the reviews in this and other newsgroups
sorry to be a bother but could you give me the name of the pink
thermal pads,i hadnt heard of that before
thanks for the reply,thankfuly i havent bought a celeron,i was
considering it till i read the reviews in this and other newsgroups
sorry to be a bother but could you give me the name of the pink
thermal pads,i hadnt heard of that before and am trying to pick up
things as i go along here
Hmm... I'm not sure that they really have a name! I suppose they
probably aren't always pink either, though all the ones I've seen have
been. They are usually just referred to as a "thermal transfer pad"
easier to use correctly for new users (thermal grease is only
effective if you use a VERY flat and thin layer, many people just slap
a bunch of the stuff on, sometimes making it worse than no grease at
all). The only reason why I mentioned them is that you don't need to
Good call!
Hmm... I'm not sure that they really have a name! I suppose they
probably aren't always pink either, though all the ones I've seen have
been. They are usually just referred to as a "thermal transfer pad"
or some such thing. I've never seen them sold separately from a
heatsink in any stores, usually they just come pre-packaged with a
heatsink, particularly if you buy a "retail box" processor which has
the processor and heatsink in one package.
Generally speaking they seem to be falling out of favor. Even most
retail box CPU + heatsink combos seem to come with a little dab of
thermal grease these days. Thermal grease is generally a bit more
effective, but the pads used to be reasonable common because they're
easier to use correctly for new users (thermal grease is only
effective if you use a VERY flat and thin layer, many people just slap
a bunch of the stuff on, sometimes making it worse than no grease at
all). The only reason why I mentioned them is that you don't need to
go out of your way to buy thermal grease if you buy a CPU + heatsink
combo that comes with one of these pads.