Originally posted by: THUGSROOK
great idea Banditbanger!
anyone out there had any 1st hand experiences cleaning up a very used and stubborn retail P4 HSF?
...or if you wanna write some tips on how to remove the thermal pad from a new P4 HSF, we could use that info too.
Originally posted by: prontospyder
<<reason c) it can destroy your HSF and / or CPU during removal! (yes it can!)>>
You are absolutely right. I tried removing the heatsink attached to my P4 and it ripped the CPU out from the socket while the cpu was still locked in. It bent a few pins but luckily, it still works.
Could you elaborate on this point? or perhaps point me to a good source to read up on it?1) do not have case fans blowing on your retail HSF!
reason a) they are temp sensative and need to be hot.
Originally posted by: John
Originally posted by: THUGSROOK
great idea Banditbanger!
anyone out there had any 1st hand experiences cleaning up a very used and stubborn retail P4 HSF?
...or if you wanna write some tips on how to remove the thermal pad from a new P4 HSF, we could use that info too.
I use my fingernail to pull off one edge of the aluminum thermal pad, and then rip it off. It leaves a sticky "adhesive" residue on the heatsink, so I clean it up with Goof Off. I then give a final wipe of Isopropyl Rubbing Alcohol.
Apply the same cleaning method to the cpu core.
Originally posted by: Evan Lieb
I'm not sure how accurate some of this info is.
I've reinstalled the same retail P4 HSF at least 10 times with the thermal pad. Nothing was damaged, and CPU temps on the 2.4A P4 I was using never got higher than 45C, and usually were around 39-40C.
You probably don't want to overclock with the thermal pad, but regular operation (web, games, etc.) should do just fine (even after the HSF has been used multiple times).
Originally posted by: jhites
Same method as John but I spray a little WD40 on the remaining adhesive, let it sit for a few minutes and wipe it with a dry cloth. I then clean the area with 90% Isopropyl Alcohol. Works great.