F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Bicycle bearing grease as TIM

Bicycle bearing grease as TIM

Bicycle bearing grease as TIM

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thejet0722
Junior Member
28
09-07-2016, 10:10 AM
#11
Sounds like your local version is El Cheapo. Aim for Arctic Silver 5, or if you're after the best, check out Shin Etsu.
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thejet0722
09-07-2016, 10:10 AM #11

Sounds like your local version is El Cheapo. Aim for Arctic Silver 5, or if you're after the best, check out Shin Etsu.

J
J1son
Member
211
09-09-2016, 09:16 AM
#12
yes. you wouldn't even need to go back in to replace it, like you would if you used mayonnaise & didn't want your computer to attract flies.
it may not work great, but it fills the air gaps, and as long as there is good pressure between the CPU lid and the bottom of the heat sink, it'll work.
of course it would be best to just use a little so you don't get crud on the motherboard.
when you say bearing grease are you referring to the stuff you use if you re-pack a hub on a wheel or the crank axle ?
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J1son
09-09-2016, 09:16 AM #12

yes. you wouldn't even need to go back in to replace it, like you would if you used mayonnaise & didn't want your computer to attract flies.
it may not work great, but it fills the air gaps, and as long as there is good pressure between the CPU lid and the bottom of the heat sink, it'll work.
of course it would be best to just use a little so you don't get crud on the motherboard.
when you say bearing grease are you referring to the stuff you use if you re-pack a hub on a wheel or the crank axle ?

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mitchellb213
Member
148
09-09-2016, 10:06 AM
#13
Raviolissimo :
yes. you wouldn't even need to go back in to replace it, like you would if you used mayonnaise & didn't want your computer to attract flies.
it may not work great, but it fills the air gaps, and as long as there is good pressure between the CPU lid and the bottom of the heat sink, it'll work.
of course it would be best to just use a little so you don't get crud on the motherboard.
when you say bearing grease are you referring to the stuff you use if you re-pack a hub on a wheel or the crank axle ?
Good point, I'm hoping he's refering to the middleweight grease you'd use to repack a crank. Clamp pressure usually squeezes the stuff out thin enough to see through. It never really dries completely and a thin layer of it does work well. When it is fully "cooked" it has a wax-like consistency, kind of like the black TIM Intel used on its older processors.
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mitchellb213
09-09-2016, 10:06 AM #13

Raviolissimo :
yes. you wouldn't even need to go back in to replace it, like you would if you used mayonnaise & didn't want your computer to attract flies.
it may not work great, but it fills the air gaps, and as long as there is good pressure between the CPU lid and the bottom of the heat sink, it'll work.
of course it would be best to just use a little so you don't get crud on the motherboard.
when you say bearing grease are you referring to the stuff you use if you re-pack a hub on a wheel or the crank axle ?
Good point, I'm hoping he's refering to the middleweight grease you'd use to repack a crank. Clamp pressure usually squeezes the stuff out thin enough to see through. It never really dries completely and a thin layer of it does work well. When it is fully "cooked" it has a wax-like consistency, kind of like the black TIM Intel used on its older processors.

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TFP_Cookie
Junior Member
18
09-09-2016, 08:58 PM
#14
Toms wrote an article about this, stating that toothpaste is most effective without thermal paste.
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TFP_Cookie
09-09-2016, 08:58 PM #14

Toms wrote an article about this, stating that toothpaste is most effective without thermal paste.

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