WTF? lol
Practice makes perfect. Of course I'm better at it and know more about it. Cause I've done it many many several times.
Practice makes perfect if you're working on the same thing constantly. If conditions and the tools involved change - like CPUs and technology have done in massive ways over the past decade and a half - then the thinking behind said practice also needs to change, otherwise you risk getting stuck in habits and modes of thinking and doing that applied to older tools but not newer ones. Experience
can make you an expert - or it can make you highly resistant to change through entrenching old habits and outmoded knowledge.
From how you're actively appealing to your experience as some form of unquestionable authority here, I'm tempted to place you firmly in the latter category. So far you've done nothing to dissuade me from that impression.
In some cases, storing energy before dissipation works. What you don't get is, why.
It's based on time to move BTU. Understanding how to move 1200 btu/h is a different story.
... and? Were you going somewhere with this?
If your IHS is
storing energy, then its temperature is rising. If its temperature is rising, then the delta between the CPU core and the IHS is shrinking (because CPU core thermal rise under load is essentially instantaneous). If the deltaT between core and IHS shrinks, the rate of thermal transfer between the two slows. If the thermal transfer between the two slows, the CPU temperature will again rise until it reaches a new equilibrium point between CPU and IHS temperatures and thermal transfer between them.
Most of the time, I use a larger plate, not smaller or none at all.
... and? Is this an argument? How?
If a thicker cold plate is better, why not just use a thick copper block between your cooler and IHS?
The cold plate on the waterblock matters as well.
... has anyone said otherwise? AFAIK we've been talking 'all else being equal' - if your cooling sucks, then your cooling sucks. We're not comparing coolers here, we're talking about the effects of an IHS in a thermal transfer chain.
Ideally, move the thermals quickly. But AMD is not counting on everyone running naked die, so IHS plate is what your going to get.
Yes, and they made a conscious choice to make that IHS very thick to keep cooler compatibility with AM4 coolers rather than slim it down to improve temperatures - a consumer-friendly choice, but also one that makes their temperatures look worse. They know that the CPUs can handle it, and can reach and maintain very high clock speeds under these conditions, so it's clearly not a problem. Which is what I've been saying all along. Two things can be true at once: that this is a perfectly fine design,
and that this IHS is thicker than what is ideal.