Hello everyone. As you know by now I deal with a lot of used tech. Keeping it in top working order is very important! That's why I have this video for you today :)
They will still work to keep your vram and power delivery cool but if they are crusty then it is advised to change them because they can shrink overtime because of the heat and stop making contact with the heatsink or the ic's
i was thinking youre talking about thermally conductive, so youre talking about electrically conductive right? google says the arctic silver is not tho
@Aiyqk artic silver is, artic ceramique, mx2, mx5 are all safe off the top of my head tho I also have used k2, gd900, and kingpins blue smurf sauce and they all have been fine. Most pastes are based off carbon or silicon these days, so it's largely a non issue
Wow. This is so clean and concise. Very good.
Very helpful! Lowered temps by 20c after 8 years
Amigo sabe qual a medida do termal pad da placa msi r9 390x
Quero troca da minha
Thanks
Just got a question about the thermalpads, so i dont have to change them, they should still work right?
They will still work to keep your vram and power delivery cool but if they are crusty then it is advised to change them because they can shrink overtime because of the heat and stop making contact with the heatsink or the ic's
watch my video on the r9 390x the most detailed one on yt
Did you change the pads? If so, what size was they?
DO NOT put artic silver or any other conductive paste on a GPU! I came here for some pcb details on this exact card, wish you guys best of luck.
what are you talking about? what else would you put on it?
@@Aiyqk any paste that isn't conductive. Ceramic or silicon based pastes are good examples.
i was thinking youre talking about thermally conductive, so youre talking about electrically conductive right? google says the arctic silver is not tho
@Aiyqk artic silver is, artic ceramique, mx2, mx5 are all safe off the top of my head tho
I also have used k2, gd900, and kingpins blue smurf sauce and they all have been fine. Most pastes are based off carbon or silicon these days, so it's largely a non issue