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- Jan 18, 2012
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- Quodam loco Albanianae
System Name | The Dark side of the room |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X |
Motherboard | MSI MEG X570 Unify |
Cooling | Custom loop watercooling (Bykski CPU-XPR-POM-M-V2, Alphacool Eisblock GPX, Freezemod PU-PWM5B18W) |
Memory | GSkill Ripjaws V DDR4 3600 CL16 (4 x 16GB) |
Video Card(s) | XFX Speedster QICK 319 Radeon RX 6700 XT |
Storage | 1 x Kingston KC3000 1024GB (boot drive) + 2 x Kingston NV2 2TB (games & storage) |
Display(s) | LG 34WP65C Ultrawide 3440x1440 @ 160Hz freesync premium |
Case | Thermaltake Core P90 TG (slightly modded) |
Audio Device(s) | onboard Realtek® ALC1220 with Logitech Z906 |
Power Supply | MSI MAG A850GF 80 Plus Gold |
Mouse | Generic |
Keyboard | Sharkoon Skiller SGK60 (with brown Kalih switches) |
Software | Windows 11 pro |
Benchmark Scores | It's a form of exhibitionism...;-), but fun in a way But showing off is triggering............. |
Yup, temperature increasements in chemistry often work as a catalyst in chemical reactions (like oxydizing). I would not find it strange if that happens with certain components of a TIM also.Few oils oxidize at the temps computer CPUs them expose to.
However, the applied TIM between a cold plate and IHS/Die hardly has any (direct and/or prolongued) exposure to Oxygen, only a little on the edges so I'm curious to see a substantiated explanation from a chemist regarding this.
For all I know it might be a way more complex mechanism at work here, perhaps the pump-out effect has impact, maybe even within the TIM due to different physics of the solid and liquid components of a TIM. Not even mentioning the variables of mounting pressure, layer thickness and so on.
For TIM's drying out in their storage device, I would say: product design error or too much compromise to the balance of components/packaging .
So last week I was pondering regarding the custom loop cleaning and upgrade of my cooling system with the new parts I already have laying around (the annual cleaning is waaay overdue ).
I seriously considering about purchasing an Alphcool Core 1 LT and combining it with with a ThermalGrizzly PhaseSheet PTM (as soon as the latter is available in the Aquatune webshop).
For my graphics card I'm still doubting, will I repaste with my trusted Arctic MX4 (which I have used to my satisfaction for way over a decade), or make the jump and go for a ThermalGrizzly Kryosheet to see if I can bring the hotspot temp down (Delta-T is now between 25 ~35 C under full load).
Note: My Ryzen 9 5900x gets hot enough but for my graphis card I think phase change material has no added value as the temps are mostly around 44 ~ 47 degrees Celsuis under full load, and the phase change starts at approximately 45 degrees, so it won't reach it's full potential. Thats why the choice for Kryosheet or to stay with MX4.
Above mentioned temps are with Arctic MX4 from a 20g syringe of over ten years old mind you , so I have doubts about some statements regarding aging of silicon based TIM's and are in my opinion overrated.
For example precipitation can (relatively) easily be solved by remixing. Oxidation however is more of an irreversable process, so in my book the jury is still out .
But in the end, that's just me trying the relativize, feel free to disagree .
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