Would appear he used acetone to remove the solder right after he heated it up to remove the IHS to begin with.
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Idle of 21*C and 100% load of 30*C...we 'air-cooled' people can only dream...
So if I successfully remove the IHS on my i7, I would need to remove the latch from the cpu socket I guess?
The one that keeps the cpu in place I mean...
Thanks for your feedback!:bday2:
I'll add some to post #1.
The acetone is only used to clean the Heatspreader. Take a razorblade to plane the solder tin from the core. Intels tin is malleable @ ambient temperature.
It depends on your "regular" heatsink. Intel-boxed-cooler=no way because of the push pins. A DIE is fragile like porcelain. If you concentrate high pressure on a small area, it'll break. You should prefer a cooling solution with 4 bolts or anyting like this to press the cooler firmly down to the cpu surface. For example just mod the boxed cooler (4 skrews M3x40, 12 plastic washers,4nuts, 4 knurled nuts;))
BTW: I don't think, that an IHS removal makes sense for an air cooling setup. Get a nice cooler and sand the IHS down.
http://www.caseking.de/shop/catalog/...er::11849.html
:yepp:Removing the latch isn't necessary in most cases. Look at the bottom of your Heatsink if it fits.
Just insane!
A very good guide. Thanks. :)
damn :D
very nice how to :D but i won't be doing this i think lolz :D
would this be good for phase? excellent guide
Oh.... This is just too AWESOME, you are awesome.
And it would be even more awesome if you could put up a alittle more detailed guide of the "How the story continues: The custom-waterblock."-part of the guide.
I'm really tempted doing this myself :)
So if you dont have more pics, you can maybe atleast try explaining more like "step-by-step".
I hope that its not all too much expected :)
I have already posted this step-by-step guide here. Believe it or not: one day later, XS was down and my posts were lost. :clap:
Thanks to your awesomeness, zerophax, I am working on a new guide now. Will post the link in a few days.
To the XS-server owners: STOP OVERCLOCKING YOUR RAID CONTROLLERS, WE NEED A STABLE FORUM!:D
This is so insane, I would be too scared to try myself, you got ballz dude :up:
lol i dont think so...condesation on a ihs i 1 thing,but on a direct die...?....water+direct die = no good i think.chilled waterblock should be just fine.
i have cracked naked northbridge chips before,same things as cpu naked i would imagine.my mcw-30 cracked the corner right off of my old dfi 680i.must VERY careful tighting anything down on something like this,slow and even.1/8 in tire lug patern turns only til snug,then done..no more.
i am impressed with your thread dude.tho imust admit my new C0 stepping e8400 with my new multi core(mc)dd tdk block at 30c 1.28 volts 4ghz keeps me content.tho....20 c would be nice =) i am certian i could pop mine off and put my new dd block on it being its 4 screw turndown setup and i know the miamal pressure and method to tighten without damging now.
now a phase change head on direct die i would imagine from a critical pressure point would crack it instantly because the second u gently tightend down on the corners the actual phase "neck" with all the plumbing,wiring,thick foam insulation etc would pull 1/8 inch one way as soon as u let go and .....crack!
So... How much do I have to shell out to get my hands on a direct-die WC block of my own? :D
Seriosly man, WOW. I wish I could get my Xeon running 30c load @4
:shocked:
might try this. it doesnt look like its dificult
wow, props! You're much braver than I could ever be. Wow... that's all I got to say. :D
VERY nice results man!
I mean it :)
Sorry for bumping this thread, but where did you get these razor blades?
Ltd. edition, no longer available:lastweek:
The Croma razor blades provide a soft and smoothing shave and fit all Intel processors.:yepp:
Sweeeet!
I think you can remove the IHS from pretty much all CPUs. Not sure tho..
Then again there is always this
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...d.php?t=209279
Insane, simply insane.
I must try this with my new TEC+TRUE cooling.
@OP nice work m8.....
thanks for the info....