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System Name | Office |
---|---|
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Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
I think you're misunderstanding those terms. Low viscosity means that the TIM will not drip or leak all over your system. High viscosity means that the TIM would be very runny and would drip and leak all over. You want your TIM to stay where you put it, so low viscosity is what you want.
You've got it backward. Viscosity can be notionally thought of as "thickness". Higher viscosity = lower rate of flow.