Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Tue, 7 Oct 2008 16:23:01 -0700
From:      Walt Pawley <walt@wump.org>
To:        FreeBSD Questions ML <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: Coretemp seems to be off quite a bit
Message-ID:  <p0624086cc5119de1385c@[10.0.0.10]>
In-Reply-To: <EFCE31F4-847B-4C2B-AA05-78B79F19CF01@strauser.com>
References:  <F39A6D89-C720-401D-8399-AA0BB644736B@strauser.com> <20081007132517.GA31229@melon.esperance-linux.co.uk> <20081007132832.GA49914@icarus.home.lan> <20081007173315.GA35592@melon.esperance-linux.co.uk> <20081007175124.GA54581@icarus.home.lan> <EFCE31F4-847B-4C2B-AA05-78B79F19CF01@strauser.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
>On Oct 7, 2008, at 12:51 PM, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
>...
>I remounted the heatsink (side note: curse you, Intel - was that meant
>to be funny?), and didn't apply a single bit of paste other than what
>came on it.

FWIW: one needs to be careful with the application of heat sink
"paste" if one doesn't want to do more harm than good. A very
many years ago, when I was young enough to be a practicing
engineer, National Semiconductor published some notes about
various component to heat sink mounting methodologies. There
were two results that stood out. First, using too much heat
sink compound is worse than using nothing at all. The reason is
that metal to metal is quite good and the proper application of
of compound should only just fill the voids where the two
"flat" surfaces don't touch. Second, metal to metal is quite
good - as evidenced by a very large jump in heat conductivity
when the component was surface soldered to the heat sink.
-- 

Walter M. Pawley <walt@wump.org>
Wump Research & Company
676 River Bend Road, Roseburg, OR 97471
         541-672-8975



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?p0624086cc5119de1385c>