i am having a problem with my SB overheating and i want to remove the heatsink to clean and regrease it, but it's attached to the motherboard with springloaded plastic pins that expand when pushed through the motherboard. i can't seem to grip the pin with the pliers and push it back through at all. In an earlier post someone said just pinch it with a pliers and "voila!" and i don't know what they mean--it seems pretty difficult to me to remove those plastic pins without damaging them. Can anyone elaborate? what kind of pliers are you using? how do you grip the pins without them slipping off or being too close to the hole to push the pin through?
I just gave up in frustration yesterday and am hoping the temperature spikes i'm seeing on the southbridge sensor for just a second (it spikes from 48 to 200 and back, about once or maybe twice in a few hours) are an artifact, perhaps a faulty sensor. The motherboard is a Rampage Gene II/ CG5290 and I've wanted to remove both the NB and SB heatsinks and clean and replace the thermal grease on them ever since i heard there was some sort of "pad" stuck between the chip and the heatsink that was preventing the heatsinks from working well. I was searching for info when the northbridge was overheating a few months back (I added a second chassis fan which brought that down to 66 which is i guess passable). I just replaced the hard drive after numerous failure warnings from windows and SMART last week if that is relevant...I replaced it with an equivalent in capacity and speed, a caviar green, 1 tb 7200 sata. I tried not to disturb the cables in the case as much as possible.
Any info anyone can give me on these pins, the overheating problem, or the mb and its problems would be appreciated as I can't really afford to replace this hardware for awhile and I need to keep this thing limping along for as long as possible. Right now i have the case open and i've only seen the spike once in many hours of computing. Temps are CPU=35, MB=31, SB=47, NB=66, and i'm running an asus essentio cg5290 [i7, 9MB. etc] with just 3 modifications -the opened case, the extra fan, and the new hard drive. I disassembled it yesterday trying to get to the SB heatsink, but as I say gave up in disgust when i couldn't get those pins out with my needlenose pliers. Maybe I need a better pair
I'm beginning to think I looked at this thing crosseyed and it's getting its jollies out of random failure warnings...
-fran
I just gave up in frustration yesterday and am hoping the temperature spikes i'm seeing on the southbridge sensor for just a second (it spikes from 48 to 200 and back, about once or maybe twice in a few hours) are an artifact, perhaps a faulty sensor. The motherboard is a Rampage Gene II/ CG5290 and I've wanted to remove both the NB and SB heatsinks and clean and replace the thermal grease on them ever since i heard there was some sort of "pad" stuck between the chip and the heatsink that was preventing the heatsinks from working well. I was searching for info when the northbridge was overheating a few months back (I added a second chassis fan which brought that down to 66 which is i guess passable). I just replaced the hard drive after numerous failure warnings from windows and SMART last week if that is relevant...I replaced it with an equivalent in capacity and speed, a caviar green, 1 tb 7200 sata. I tried not to disturb the cables in the case as much as possible.
Any info anyone can give me on these pins, the overheating problem, or the mb and its problems would be appreciated as I can't really afford to replace this hardware for awhile and I need to keep this thing limping along for as long as possible. Right now i have the case open and i've only seen the spike once in many hours of computing. Temps are CPU=35, MB=31, SB=47, NB=66, and i'm running an asus essentio cg5290 [i7, 9MB. etc] with just 3 modifications -the opened case, the extra fan, and the new hard drive. I disassembled it yesterday trying to get to the SB heatsink, but as I say gave up in disgust when i couldn't get those pins out with my needlenose pliers. Maybe I need a better pair

-fran