In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems George Macdonald <fammacd=!SPAM^> wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Aug 2003 08:17:03 -0000, wrote:
> >Hi. I am wondering. How long does one thermal paste/grease last for a
> >Pentium III 600 Mhz CPU (Katami/Slot 1)? I noticed that a year ago I
> >had to clean the CPU's old grease/paste and put a new supply. After a
> >year, my computer started crashing when in stress (e.g., compiling and
> >getting too hot; 106 degrees(F)).
> First people get annoyed when you quote temps in ?F - it's not considered
> suitable for scientific work. Are you sure your CPU is only at 106?
Yes. Since I am from U.S.A, I am used to say fahrenheight and I don't have
a calculator nor remember the formula to translate to C.
> (~41?C)? The Katmai 600MHz was one of the hottest CPUs for its day - it
> was basically an overclocked part by Intel. Then again absolute temps from
Hmm, I didn't know that. Maybe that is why I had so many problems with heat
and CPU stress. I remember buying it the first time (yes, I even tried another
CPU) that my games and anything intensive (like CPUburn) crashed like heck.
This was on an ASUS P3B-F motherboard before swiching to my old DFI motheboard
(the one I have now). Identical symptoms.
> mbrd monitors are not a good measure due to calibration differences. WHat
> you need to look at is relative temps: working vs. not working?
The BIOS and softwares were the identical. Right now, almost idled
temperatures 98.6 degrees(F)/38.0 degrees(C) with:
load average: 0.12, 0.17, 0.11 ... Not working temperatures were listed in
my original posts. I don't want to compile or do anything intensive to crash
again. The system has been up for 2 days so far, pretty much idling.
Before the problems came back up from my compile, I had 160+ days uptime.
Darn it. :P
> Was that CPU a retail version with the Intel installed heatsink/fan? I
Yep. Retail with the goodies.
> still have my retail PIII 450 and it runs at 65?C on a warmish day - say
> 25-30?C room ambient. I've never touched the thermal grease on it because
> it looks like it is still a paste - the stuff that I can see anyway. The
> lower cost thermal pastes *do* tend to separate out and bleed the
> oil/grease away, particularly for the cache chips which do not actually
> make direct contact with the heatsink plate - IOW the thermal paste
> actually fills an air gap.
That is what happened last time. I am thinking the grease fell apart
again.

I don't remember what brand I used last time since it was almost
a year ago or so. Which brand do you suggest? I live in Southern CA, USA.
> >I do a lot of compiling on this machine. My room can get very hot during
> >summer times (85 degrees(F)). I didn't have this problem until a few days
> >ago, and in the past few months, it has been very hot so it didn't just
> >get hotter. Even during cooler hours (at night), my computer will still
> >crash due to enornmous stress and heat it produces. I am wondering if
> >thermal paste/grease is supposed to last years.
> You might want to take a look at the phase change thermal interface
> materials that AMD recommends for their current CPUs. Other than that
> maybe a better thermal grease would work better and make sure you don't use
> too much. Also, have you checked the heatsink fins are not clogged with
> dust?
Fins seem to look fine. I am thinking it is the grease since it is a
repeat of the last time the grease had to be recreated.
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