• JackFrostNCola@aussie.zone
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    13 hours ago

    I once inherited a PC from my older brother, he had built it himself and i decided it needed a sping clean. I opened it up and airdusted with the help of an old toothbrush, but couldnt get some fluff/dust out of the CPU cooler so i took it off to get behind it properly.
    The little plastic cover over the thermal paste was still on the heatsink sandwiched between the heatstink and the CPU.
    He hasnt heard the end of it.

    • Mohamed@lemmy.ca
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      12 hours ago

      It is surprising and Im sure it reduced the performance, but plastic still conducts heat and sounds like it was a thermoplastic and it didn’t melt.

    • Saryn@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Wow. I’m surprised it worked for so long. I assume there were issues, such as high temp, that your brother didn’t diagnoze or didn’t know how to. Impressive that CPU is working all those years. Any damage to its function?

      • JackFrostNCola@aussie.zone
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        3 hours ago

        I didnt have the analitical skills at the time to test its performance as i was ~12years old, but i remember it always ran full speed CPU fan and only very occasionally shutdown on overtemp, once i removed the plastic it went back to normal/expected fan speeds. It was probably the AMD Athlon generation CPU from memory, so it probably wasnt being pushed too hard to perform, mostly running Snes emulators and sim city 2000 probably.

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Back in the 00s, a story about CPUs getting so hot they’d start on fire went viral. In it was a video of someone removing the cooler while it was running and then a few seconds later a flame appears.

        On the one hand, obviously you shouldn’t remove your CPU cooler while it was running.

        But on the other hand, fans and mounts can fail, so this was still a risk even for people who were smarter than removing the cooler entirely.

        It prompted CPU makers to add thermal protections that started out as “if CPU hits threshold, cut power”, but over time more sophisticated heat management was integrated with more sophisticated performance and power management.

        So these days, if you aren’t sufficiently cooling your CPU, it won’t die much quicker, instead it will throttle performance to keep heat at safe levels. OP would have gotten better performance out of it after removing that plastic. Assuming it was CPU bottlenecked in the first place. Things like RAM choice and settings can make it a moot point because the RAM can’t keep up with the CPU at 100% power anyways.