I gave this experiment one more attempt to see if I could get any different results.
I found out that one of my favourite oil brands Penrite has a product called Copper Eze. This stuff looks much more like the Kopr-Kote where it's a bronze paste in appearance, rather than the Devon Stop-Seize I used that's almost totally black with some metallic fleck instead.
Unfortunately Copper Eze is a failure too, long story short. It's actually the most terrible thermal paste substitute I've tried to date. It idles at 50C and hits 100C the instant you put a load on it. A normal idle is in the low 30's. I was more hopeful with this one because it apparently uses zinc oxide (found in thermal paste), proving once again that chemistry makes absolutely no bloody sense whatsoever.
I also tried both thick and thinner-than-a-bee's-dick applications but it doesn't really make a difference. The thinner application might be a few degrees cooler but I can't verify when the CPU can't handle a 100% load for more than a few seconds.
Cooler Master 212 is okay but it has a really weak clip-on mounting system that doesn't support the tower cooler properly. I was kind of disappointed when I got mine. Unless it's mounted in a system where the motherboard is laying flat it would be good, although that's pretty uncommon.
I found out that one of my favourite oil brands Penrite has a product called Copper Eze. This stuff looks much more like the Kopr-Kote where it's a bronze paste in appearance, rather than the Devon Stop-Seize I used that's almost totally black with some metallic fleck instead.
Unfortunately Copper Eze is a failure too, long story short. It's actually the most terrible thermal paste substitute I've tried to date. It idles at 50C and hits 100C the instant you put a load on it. A normal idle is in the low 30's. I was more hopeful with this one because it apparently uses zinc oxide (found in thermal paste), proving once again that chemistry makes absolutely no bloody sense whatsoever.
I also tried both thick and thinner-than-a-bee's-dick applications but it doesn't really make a difference. The thinner application might be a few degrees cooler but I can't verify when the CPU can't handle a 100% load for more than a few seconds.
I'd say.. Cooler Master Hyper 212 for the win. Excellent cooling, inexpensive. Win.
Cooler Master 212 is okay but it has a really weak clip-on mounting system that doesn't support the tower cooler properly. I was kind of disappointed when I got mine. Unless it's mounted in a system where the motherboard is laying flat it would be good, although that's pretty uncommon.
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