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Thermalright Site Updated with Heilos Thermal Pad Products

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Thermalright has taken yet another low-key approach to announcing new products—the Taiwan hardware cooling specialist has updated its website with Heilos thermal pads. The model name looks to be a typo—should they have used "Helios" instead? A prominent sun graphic is placed on the bottom left of Thermalright's packaging for both of the Intel and AMD variants. It is unfortunate that something got lost in translation, or a spellcheck did not pick up on the small error before going to print/publication. Anyway...Thermalright is offering two sizes, with an identical 0.2 mm thickness—40x40 mm for AMD's AM4/AM5 CPU platforms, and a smaller pad (40x30 mm) for Intel LGA115X/1200/1700 CPUs. Pricing and availability is TBD.

These easy-peel away applicators provide an alternative route for users who fret about the best way to deal with traditional tubes of thermal paste. Tom's Hardware has pored over the Heilos specs—these pads offer thermal conductivity performance (8.5 W/mK) and resistance (0.04°C cm²/W), comparable (in their opinion) to "inexpensive" tubes of Arctic MX-4 and MX-5. The latter ranks at number four on the publication's "list of the best thermal pastes." Older thermal pads from other manufacturers have been criticized for falling short in terms of cooling performance, when cross-referenced against market leading thermal pastes—it is encouraging to see Thermalright addressing these concerns (specs-wise). We hope that evaluation samples have been sent out to review outlets.




Heilos Intel Product Description
Specifications:
  • Dimensions:L30 mm x W40 mm x T0.2 mm
  • Thermal Conductivity(W / m-k):8.5 W/mk
  • Color:Gray
  • Thermal Resistance:0.04° cm²/W
  • Resistivity:2.1×10¹⁴ Ω·cm
  • Electrically Conductive:NO
  • Harmless:YES
  • Thickness:0.2 mm
  • Intel:LGA115X/1200/1700

Heilos AMD Product Description
Specifications:
  • Dimensions:L40 mm x W40 mm x T0.2 mm
  • Thermal Conductivity(W / m-k):8.5 W/mk
  • Color:Gray
  • Thermal Resistance:0.04° cm²/W
  • Resistivity:2.1×10¹⁴ Ω·cm
  • Electrically Conductive:NO
  • Harmless:YES
  • Thickness:0.2 mm
  • AMD:AM4/AM5

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
HAHAHA Engrish never ceases to amuse.
 
Do they offer larger/other pads with these specs? 0.2mm is a bit thin, but would work well in concert with thermal shims for chipsets, VRMs, VRAM, etc.
 
PTM 7950 copy or even rebrand.
I wonder what'll end up more affordable and available? Lots of scam listings for PTM 7950, etc. and often expensive from 1st party partners like Mouser, Digi-Key, etc.
 
I'd grab these if it meant NEVER having to deal with thermal paste ever again! Absolutely hate dealing with it.
 
he latter ranks at number four on the publication's "list of the best thermal pastes."
Interesting that you quoted shill's hardware here, which is known to be widely incompetent.
Anyway, these tests and article are complete bullocks because they measure only fresh application and not how TP actually holds up with time, which is the most important factor for 99% of users.
 
Thermalright's heatsinks and fans are priced very attractively, but I've never been able to find any of their thermal pads at good prices.
 
Interesting that you quoted shill's hardware here, which is known to be widely incompetent.
Anyway, these tests and article are complete bullocks because they measure only fresh application and not how TP actually holds up with time, which is the most important factor for 99% of users.

If these are actually PTM7950 or some other legit phase change material they should last a long, long time.
 
please read my message again, TH is not a good source for quoting.
I stopped reading TH after their acquisition, and TH isn't relevant to the statement. Any real phase change material should last a long time, due to no pump out. I need to find the Honeywell document but PTM7950 is expected to last years.
 
I stopped reading TH after their acquisition, and TH isn't relevant to the statement. Any real phase change material should last a long time, due to no pump out. I need to find the Honeywell document but PTM7950 is expected to last years.
the post you replied to is completely related only to the TH, seems to me you have really hard time understanding.
 
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