X2 Makes High-Viscosity Thermal Interface Material

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hotroderx

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I know this has been done in the past but I like to see Tom's take all the new and old Thermal Paste and Test them. I don't mean a standard test either that just has stock temps and voltages. I am thinking more like they cherry pick one of there best OC processors push it as hard as they can then try the different paste out on it. When it comes to over clocking a 4-5 degree c difference can be huge. Another test I like to see is them do with thermal paste. Take one of the AMD 9590 overclock it then check temps with the different paste. Both test they could very it up One set of results with Closed Looped Water Cooler the other with Fan's. That way we could see if maybe Thermal Paste makes a bigger differences when it comes to Water Coolers. The test wouldn't be about the processors but the paste its self.
 

vaughn2k

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suggest to include the mesh size of the thermal product... one of the consideration for thermal management is BLT (not bacon, lettuce and tomato :D) or bond line thickness, and it greatly affects junction temperature.
 

danwat1234

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hotroderx when they do the test, I hope they also do a longevity test. Arctic MX2 from my experience has very good longevity in hot environments and good performance, others such as Coolaboratory Liquid Ultra and possibly others do not, thermal conductivity takes a dive over time
 

Soul_keeper

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I'd rather see a test in a controlled environment using some kind of custom hotplate. I think this would take out a lot of the variance in testing and provide the best scientific numbers for the thermal conductivity.
 

alextheblue

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hotroderx when they do the test, I hope they also do a longevity test. Arctic MX2 from my experience has very good longevity in hot environments and good performance, others such as Coolaboratory Liquid Ultra and possibly others do not, thermal conductivity takes a dive over time
I like MX2. It's fairly easy to work with, provides good all-around performance in a variety of cooling setups, is affordable, and as you say long lasting. I used to say the same about Arctic Silver many years ago but MX2 eclipsed it some time ago_On the other side of the spectrum, some of these "less mess" high viscosity compounds are a PITA to work with and/or require a lot of clamping pressure to get good results. No thank you.
I'd rather see a test in a controlled environment using some kind of custom hotplate. I think this would take out a lot of the variance in testing and provide the best scientific numbers for the thermal conductivity.
I seem to recall THG did this a long time ago for heatsink tests. I can't recall the specific reason they stopped. No doubt there were issues, whether it was accuracy problems or just wanting more real-world numbers.
 
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