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Heating problem - considering replacing the hardware

Tags:
  • Thermal Compound
  • CPUs
Last response: in CPUs
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December 15, 2013 2:28:35 AM

Hello!

I have been experiencing some problems with my stationary computer lately. I purchased it back in 2008 so perhaps it's mot that odd.

It first started with my fans making a lot of noise. I decided to take the cpu fan off for a closer cleaning, but I eventually ended up with the entire heatsink in my hands.

I purchased some thermal paste and got it back on. When I booted the computer I thought both my gpu and cpu temps where a bit off (cpu temp wasn't really that high but gpu was sky rocketing).

Replaced the thermal paste on the cpu once again and took out the graphics card and removed the dust there as well. Then when I booted up again I got a bios message telling me an overclock had gone wrong... Computer wouldn't boot and I when I restart it now I don't even get a startup screen. It just tries to boot for 2-3 seconds and then restarts.

I have tried to reapply the thermal paste perhaps 6 times now, but I can't seem to find any progress.

My computer is a it outdated (specs under), perhaps I should just purchase a new graphics card/cpu/heatsink? Got any tips on what hardware I can aim for? Or perhaps some tips to fix my problem? I feel that reapplying the thermal paste is just like beating a dead horse now.

MSI P35 NEO-F, P35, Socket-775, DDR2,
1333FSB, ATX, GbLAN, PCI-Ex16

Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4GHz
Socket LGA775, 8MB, BOXED m/vifte

Corsair TWIN2X 6400 DDR2, 4096MB CL5,
Kit w/two matched CM2X2048-6400 Dimm's

Western Digital Caviar GP 500GB SATA2,
16MB 7200RPM

XFX GeForce 9600GT 650M 512MB GDDR3,
PCI-Express 2.0, 2xDVI, 650/1800Mhz

More about : heating problem replacing hardware

December 15, 2013 2:40:23 AM

When you apply thermal paste make sure you are cleaning the surface of the CPU and the Heat sink properly by using isotopic alchohol.

Try and use the line method which entails putting a line of thermal compound about an inch long right down the center of the CPU and putting the heatsink / fan on and apply firm pressure while screwing them down.

To fix your boot issue take the battery out on your motherboard for 10 mins or so (The round silver lithium ion battery) and put it back in, that will reset your bios to default and you should be able to boot.

About your GPU problems I would definitely upgrade, that GPU is past it's prime and I wouldn't be surprised if it's failed on you.

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