F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop How To Tell If Heatsink is aluminum?

How To Tell If Heatsink is aluminum?

How To Tell If Heatsink is aluminum?

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Nicke456
Junior Member
44
03-02-2016, 09:51 AM
#11
They are made of copper. You wouldn't be able to release that much heat in another way. It's about the BTU per hour you can generate, and copper offers the best cost efficiency for moving heat. Besides silver and diamonds, aluminum isn't dense enough to hold and move the same amount of thermal energy. Looking at size versus weight, if it were aluminum, the whole device would feel almost as light as a few sheets of paper. The cooler is built around the processor's TDP rating. Let me clarify this: the TDP thermal design point refers to average BTU output, not peak performance under full load. Most users aren't aware of this, which is why most laptops are throttled at 100% because the cooling system isn't designed for that level. Power limits are programmed in the BIOS and can't be adjusted by the user. And these throttling mechanisms are straightforward.
N
Nicke456
03-02-2016, 09:51 AM #11

They are made of copper. You wouldn't be able to release that much heat in another way. It's about the BTU per hour you can generate, and copper offers the best cost efficiency for moving heat. Besides silver and diamonds, aluminum isn't dense enough to hold and move the same amount of thermal energy. Looking at size versus weight, if it were aluminum, the whole device would feel almost as light as a few sheets of paper. The cooler is built around the processor's TDP rating. Let me clarify this: the TDP thermal design point refers to average BTU output, not peak performance under full load. Most users aren't aware of this, which is why most laptops are throttled at 100% because the cooling system isn't designed for that level. Power limits are programmed in the BIOS and can't be adjusted by the user. And these throttling mechanisms are straightforward.

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