F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop After five years, wet thermal paste may lose effectiveness and could be unsuitable for use.

After five years, wet thermal paste may lose effectiveness and could be unsuitable for use.

After five years, wet thermal paste may lose effectiveness and could be unsuitable for use.

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ArthoFake
Member
142
03-30-2016, 07:25 AM
#1
Hello. Welcome to the forum. After many years, I chose to refresh an old Dell Inspiron 620 with a relatively new i5 4th gen chip, motherboard, and memory setup I had made five years prior. I believed it was a solid chance to replace the thermal paste, but to my dismay, it remained wet in some areas. The heatsink used the original Intel thermal paste. Is this typical? Or could it be that I applied too much paste? Greetings from Argentina
A
ArthoFake
03-30-2016, 07:25 AM #1

Hello. Welcome to the forum. After many years, I chose to refresh an old Dell Inspiron 620 with a relatively new i5 4th gen chip, motherboard, and memory setup I had made five years prior. I believed it was a solid chance to replace the thermal paste, but to my dismay, it remained wet in some areas. The heatsink used the original Intel thermal paste. Is this typical? Or could it be that I applied too much paste? Greetings from Argentina

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AdamTheYT
Member
65
03-30-2016, 11:33 AM
#2
Too much information provided. Please clarify your request.
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AdamTheYT
03-30-2016, 11:33 AM #2

Too much information provided. Please clarify your request.

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EisTeeKlaus
Senior Member
490
03-30-2016, 06:09 PM
#3
it seems fine with this, better than nothing at all. you'll need to swap the paste soon though...
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EisTeeKlaus
03-30-2016, 06:09 PM #3

it seems fine with this, better than nothing at all. you'll need to swap the paste soon though...

T
ThaBear
Member
224
04-01-2016, 07:11 AM
#4
Not every kind of thermal paste evaporates.
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ThaBear
04-01-2016, 07:11 AM #4

Not every kind of thermal paste evaporates.