I did that when deliding the 12900KS and the 14900K did that for about 30 seconds in a wavey pattern popped the tops with no git wrenching cracking sound.
It flows when warmed? 🙂 well that explains why i always have one side of my dgpu die pooled with LM and other side is just left dry. Because i use my laptop on a angle.
I tried lm and it's working fine, damn I was scared but if you do it through the process which is the conformal coating of nail polish and then adding electric tape for extra protection. To be honest I used a single dot in order not to soil if it pressed from the top so that's it, but one thing I noticed is temp are really impressive but when I benchmark my cpu ryzen 5 5600h it stuck at base speed 3.30ghz in 100% load but it's boost upto 4.10ghz , note I live in India and currently temp are very high room temps around 35-39* celcius. But during the game play session it goes up to 3.90 ghz . No thermal throttle temps are pretty impressive during valorant.
Big fan of the picking up liquid metal method instead, i very gently uses it the fitst time on my 4790k the syringe way, but with my gpu i just tried picking it up. Do recommend holding your hand underneath it just in case though.. LM likes to move.. in doing this i axtually accidentally dropped the LM straight on a smd next to the die, but id luckily covered it all in nail polish just prior.
I wouldn’t do this while in the motherboard. If that drop fell as you carried it. It’s incredibly hard to clean. And depending on the type of solder you have, the Liquid Metal can actually dissolve away the solder and make components fall off. And not to mention it will short circuit when the motherboard turns on.
Sure if you don't feel confident then don't do it on the motherboard. Once you've done it my number of times then you realize it doesn't matter because it's not dropping due to its surface tension
It works fine with the processor but when i apply it to d-gpu in my laptop ,overtime it just moves down and then it only covers half of the d-gpu. And yes i apply to the heatsink too.
@@DaPoets no i apply only a thin layer. As i said i apply on the processor too and there has not been any issue there. Yes i applied too much LM when i applied it first time but now i don't make that mistake but still LM pools one one side of the die. Maybe it's a surface tension thing and the heatsink might be bent and doesn't touch the die which allows it to travel when it heats up to high temperatures.
Dude put the LM on a paper towel only to use it all 😂 the sheet of paper does two things btw man, it A stops you from making a potentially catastrophic mess AND lets you put on the minimal amount. Recently used LM on my GPU and saw 20c drop due to the amount of liquid metal used. If you have a spare part to try this on I highly recommend it. You may see a huge benefit in heat transfer. The thinner the better
This is a desktop PC... You would delid your CPU, which means taking off the IHS and applying liquid metals directly to the die. Be sure to do ample loads of research before even beginning to attempt it.
Liquid metal is 20 times more thermally conductive than just silicon based thermal paste. I have mine with thermal grizzly Liquid metal and temps remain less than 20 when idle and not more than 40-45 under load
I have a question. Does the liquid metal drip when the PC stands normally. Just asking because of the whole PS5 thing. Wanna try this but if it drips and shorts the mobo or gpu then its gonna be the end of me.
I wouldn't delid a 7800x3D unless you're doing direct die. Both Noctua and EK have direct die solutions and they're actually effective. I have my 7950x3D direct die cooled with a NH-D15, tested a kryosheet first and swapped to LM today.
@@InexorWoW what are good temps for 7800x3d I have a Liam li trinity Performance 360 with 6 T30 fans. But I don’t that it has a basic 2 side standard mount. I think it can go up to 75 degrees and stays at 55-65 while gaming
The lengths people go to see 2 degrees lower temp. smh I'm running a 7950X3D, all 16 cores, on Prime95 for an hour and it's running 82.5C maximum, and that's inside a $56 DIYPC quiet case whose 3 fans are running whisper quiet. What's the secret? *A good cooler!* A Noctua NH-D15s chromax .black using the TIM it ships with. You've spent more money, *_and time,_* to get 2 degrees lower temps _that are not needed_ and made your CPU more fragile: Not the gallium. Removing the heat spreader! It was designed to also protect the die from the pressure of the cooler mount. Now you have all that pressure spread over the die alone.
Oh man, reminds me of the first time I delidded my 3770k 😄
Nice
Y’all warm up the processor die with a heat gun or hairdryer it flows the LM so nicely!!!
I did that when deliding the 12900KS and the 14900K did that for about 30 seconds in a wavey pattern popped the tops with no git wrenching cracking sound.
It flows when warmed? 🙂 well that explains why i always have one side of my dgpu die pooled with LM and other side is just left dry. Because i use my laptop on a angle.
@@shadowarez1337i do it cold bro, 14900ks slapped that bihh in the delid tool and came right off
I tried lm and it's working fine, damn I was scared but if you do it through the process which is the conformal coating of nail polish and then adding electric tape for extra protection. To be honest I used a single dot in order not to soil if it pressed from the top so that's it, but one thing I noticed is temp are really impressive but when I benchmark my cpu ryzen 5 5600h it stuck at base speed 3.30ghz in 100% load but it's boost upto 4.10ghz , note I live in India and currently temp are very high room temps around 35-39* celcius. But during the game play session it goes up to 3.90 ghz . No thermal throttle temps are pretty impressive during valorant.
Big fan of the picking up liquid metal method instead, i very gently uses it the fitst time on my 4790k the syringe way, but with my gpu i just tried picking it up.
Do recommend holding your hand underneath it just in case though.. LM likes to move.. in doing this i axtually accidentally dropped the LM straight on a smd next to the die, but id luckily covered it all in nail polish just prior.
I wouldn’t do this while in the motherboard. If that drop fell as you carried it. It’s incredibly hard to clean. And depending on the type of solder you have, the Liquid Metal can actually dissolve away the solder and make components fall off. And not to mention it will short circuit when the motherboard turns on.
Sure if you don't feel confident then don't do it on the motherboard. Once you've done it my number of times then you realize it doesn't matter because it's not dropping due to its surface tension
It works fine with the processor but when i apply it to d-gpu in my laptop ,overtime it just moves down and then it only covers half of the d-gpu. And yes i apply to the heatsink too.
You used too much then
@@DaPoets no i apply only a thin layer. As i said i apply on the processor too and there has not been any issue there. Yes i applied too much LM when i applied it first time but now i don't make that mistake but still LM pools one one side of the die. Maybe it's a surface tension thing and the heatsink might be bent and doesn't touch the die which allows it to travel when it heats up to high temperatures.
@@am.ankitmon yeah the heatsink probably isn't tight and flat on it...
That whole paper towel thing is neat, but why wouldn't i just apply it directly to the affected area
dangerous, because it will just flow off the dye and has risk of leaking into the socket
Nah you need to put it straight on the IHS. Transferring from that rag is much riskier
Just put thermal past in the edges
Dude put the LM on a paper towel only to use it all 😂 the sheet of paper does two things btw man, it A stops you from making a potentially catastrophic mess AND lets you put on the minimal amount. Recently used LM on my GPU and saw 20c drop due to the amount of liquid metal used. If you have a spare part to try this on I highly recommend it. You may see a huge benefit in heat transfer. The thinner the better
I have always wondered if the LM diffuses into the Silicon.
It does not
Which direct dye kit is that
There was no kit used
what cpu is it?
8700K
Is it safe to use Liquid Metal on a desktop pc?
This is a desktop PC... You would delid your CPU, which means taking off the IHS and applying liquid metals directly to the die. Be sure to do ample loads of research before even beginning to attempt it.
Liquid metal is 20 times more thermally conductive than just silicon based thermal paste. I have mine with thermal grizzly Liquid metal and temps remain less than 20 when idle and not more than 40-45 under load
I have a question. Does the liquid metal drip when the PC stands normally. Just asking because of the whole PS5 thing. Wanna try this but if it drips and shorts the mobo or gpu then its gonna be the end of me.
If it drips you have applied too much. You only need a thin amount and due to its surface tension it will not move no matter the position.
@@DaPoets Thank you
Does any nail polish work? Just curious 😅
I'm not familiar w/ all nail polish so...
How much does this improve the heat transfer?
avg paste is about 7mK/w, this is 79-90
@@DaPoets that is a lot wow
Might start using it for my i9 13900k
Is this for overclocking?
It can be used for overclocking sure! Better temps, quieter system, etc.
Can I do it with my 7800X3D turbo without direct die application ?
I wouldn't delid a 7800x3D unless you're doing direct die. Both Noctua and EK have direct die solutions and they're actually effective. I have my 7950x3D direct die cooled with a NH-D15, tested a kryosheet first and swapped to LM today.
@@InexorWoW what are good temps for 7800x3d I have a Liam li trinity Performance 360 with 6 T30 fans. But I don’t that it has a basic 2 side standard mount. I think it can go up to 75 degrees and stays at 55-65 while gaming
Advantages of liquid metal over tbermal paste?
LM transfers heat much better than traditional thermal paste but has very specific use cases.
Will it dry up like vertical PS5?
So far no.
gravity properties
route 66 😂
Lamina de grafito/grafeno kryosheet
Lovely stuff, but it's not for nubs
too much.
It was the right amount actually. Great temps, zero long term issues.
I heard from alot of tech youtubers that liquid metal Is very bad to use 🤔
It's a very good to use if you know what you're doing. Very bad to use if you don't
Only dumbass say that 😂
You didn't remove the solder first? You're not going to see much difference then.
Wtf are you talking about? Why would you need to remove solder. When I did liquid metal on my laptop, went from 97°c to 78°c no soldr removed.
Who tf removed solder before applying liquid metal 😂
der8auer himself says that the solder should be removed and the die cleaned first. Dummies.
The lengths people go to see 2 degrees lower temp. smh
I'm running a 7950X3D, all 16 cores, on Prime95 for an hour and it's running 82.5C maximum, and that's inside a $56 DIYPC quiet case whose 3 fans are running whisper quiet.
What's the secret? *A good cooler!* A Noctua NH-D15s chromax .black using the TIM it ships with. You've spent more money, *_and time,_* to get 2 degrees lower temps _that are not needed_ and made your CPU more fragile: Not the gallium. Removing the heat spreader! It was designed to also protect the die from the pressure of the cooler mount. Now you have all that pressure spread over the die alone.
You can't change your crappy laptop's crappy cooler. That's why LM is superior
The secret is its designed to run cooler in purpose and thermal throttle early bc the 3d vcache is incredibly heat sensitive