12-04-2016, 06:38 PM
The way I learned was to put absolutely the minimal amount of thermal paste. Put a small pea sized amount on CPU, then take a business card and smooth it out as thin as possible.
The goal is to have a paper thin layer. The paste is only for filling "gaps" and manufacturing imperfections when mating the heat sink. ( Too much thermal paste can actually have a negative affect. )
Link to a good guide-> http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Laptop-Noteb...596-9.html
(If you get into industrial applications on SCR's, transistors and power dissipating components then there are precise ways per manufacturer.)
The goal is to have a paper thin layer. The paste is only for filling "gaps" and manufacturing imperfections when mating the heat sink. ( Too much thermal paste can actually have a negative affect. )
Link to a good guide-> http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Laptop-Noteb...596-9.html
(If you get into industrial applications on SCR's, transistors and power dissipating components then there are precise ways per manufacturer.)
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*Hardware hacks are my speciality.
"forum posts should be like a skirt- long enough to cover the subject material, but short enough to keep things interesting"
--I am using/Running Linuxlite 2.8, Debian8 server, Ubuntu 14, Win7,Win10, MX15, LinuxMint kde.
--Xerox field service engineer, printer repairs,network analyst.
*Hardware hacks are my speciality.
"forum posts should be like a skirt- long enough to cover the subject material, but short enough to keep things interesting"
--I am using/Running Linuxlite 2.8, Debian8 server, Ubuntu 14, Win7,Win10, MX15, LinuxMint kde.
--Xerox field service engineer, printer repairs,network analyst.