CPU Hits 80c playing flash games

cmdrbean

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Oct 27, 2009
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Here's the deal. I've got a Pentium 4 3.2, not overclocked. I noticed a while back that my CPU fan was getting very loud anytime I played any games, so I took the fan and heat sink off and cleaned them. It had some grey gunk on the back which I suppose was a thermal pad. It was mostly in tact so I just put it all back together. Well, it still seemed to be kicking the fan into high gear a lot of the time. So I installed speedfan, and with no load it would read between 50c and 60c, then while playing flash video or anything else more intensive than typical web browsing, it would shoot up to around 70c and start to sound like it was going to take off again.

So I just went out and bought a tube of thermal grease (the white kind), wiped all the grey gunk off the cpu and heatsink, and applied some thermal paste. I think I applied a little too much, but to my surprise it's now idling at around 60c, and if I try to load any flash or anything it shoots up as high as 80c now.

So I guess my question is, could misapplying the thermal paste make it hotter than it was with the old pad or pre-applied paste or whatever was on there before?

I didn't use alcohol to clean the heatsink as I don't have any, but could that really make such a huge difference? Both surfaces were visibly spotless.
 

pepperman

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Sep 15, 2009
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Putting too much thermal paste will increase temps, as it is supposed to act as a filler between the heatsink and the cpu; the thermal conductivity of thermal paste is much lower than aluminum or copper. I recommend that you reseat the heatsink with new thermal paste (make sure you clean both surfaces; best results would be to use "oops" or "glue-be-gone", though alcohol is good-but seeing as you don't have any, you can use water on the heatsink (make sure this is completely dry and be careful not to get any on the fan), but you will have to use something else on the cpu). You can follow the link below for instructions (they work for most types of thermal paste, not just arctic silver 5).

http://www.arcticsilver.com/arctic_silver_instructions.htm