Archived from groups: alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.asus (
More info?)
On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 09:30:55 -0500, nospam@needed.com (Paul) wrote:
>I think I would want the fan facing down in the case. It is supposed
>to pull air from above the CPU and exhaust out the back of the
>computer case. At least, the fan should not be facing the top of the
>computer case, as that would make the airflow harder to attain.
>
>I found a sample picture of the PSU here:
>
>http://www.pctuner.net/php/Articoli/Articolo.php?ID=226&PAG=2&lang=ita
>
>It could be the PSU is going bad.
>
>Or, it could be that the heatsink on the CPU is rotated 180 degrees
>from the correct orientation. The contact patch on the heatsink
>only lines up with the CPU die correctly, with one orientation
>of the heatsink. If the heatsink is rotated, only part of the
>silicon die touches metal, so the silicon die has radically
>different temperatures on either end of it. That could
>be triggering Asus COP (CPU overheat protection), as the eight
>pin chip monitoring the diode voltage on the CPU die will trip
>if it thinks the temp is too high. That would result in shutdown
>without warning.
Hi Paul,
Thanks for that. I do have the PSU installed like you say, with the fan
facing down onto the processor. However every picture of this PSU shows
it the other way up ( maybe only to show the other fan). The heat sink
is the correct way around as the cutout fits perfectly over the raised
edge of the processor holder.Also the processor temp is showing between
40C - 41C, never any higher. Today is turned off three times after
being on for no longer than five to ten minuets. However the next start
was ok and it has now been running continually for three hours. I have
changed everything except the heat sink and the PSU. Thanks for your
help.