Mm.. If I ever kill a chip I'll try to cook the solder off in the oven. That die would make an awesome keychain or necklace. :D
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Mm.. If I ever kill a chip I'll try to cook the solder off in the oven. That die would make an awesome keychain or necklace. :D
:rotf:
thx for information and pics
looks nasty indeed huh
I'm very tempted to do this to the i7 920 I just got. The q6600 that I sanded down is still chugging at 3.6 and belongs to a friend of mine now. The i7 ihs looks much thicker than the Q6600. This looks like a 12 hour project and a week worth of recovery.
http://justoverclockit.com/Fhbiewrbfi/2.jpg
I'm running it on a stock cooler and got it to boot at 4 ghz and stable at 3.6 (prime). The i7 is so fast that I'm running it on stock and it more than enough for me.
Just sand with 80 grit until holes develop eh.
Wow boble, that's nasty ... :D
@Ruslan: 12 hours for that ? No way ... :p :D
Or just take a dremel and pliers to it, it helps speed up the process for sure ;) I did it to my Q6600 :D
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1211601554
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1211681550
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1211681564
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1211681629
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1211681785
http://www.ocforums.com/attachment.p...1&d=1212281064
OMG how stubborn or thick headed are you guys?
The Fugger and others that have actually tried said this only applies for i7 not q6600 or whatever.
The die of the i7 is glued to the metal surface and if you try to sand, dremel, or tamper with it results in a shattered and ruined die.
Now after all this you guys wanna keep knocking on the same key, oh but I did it on my Q6600 here are some pics go ahead and try it :up:
Jor3lBR,
They told us it couldn't be done on the Core 2, but THIS IS SPAR... Xtremesystems.org.
I believe I was the first to successfully remove the IHS of a Core 2 Extreme X6800 using the cooking pot method. Others removed it before me, but I had a working CPU at the end.
There's no reason (for me) to believe that this will be any different from that. The solder in the picture on page 2 doesn't appear to be some kind of magic super solder that is any different from what was used on the Core 2. Also, if you read carefully, some of the others are not talking about removing the IHS. They are talking about sanding through it. That includes the solder.
There's always a way.
Linus
Ley him try Dave what if he finds a way :poke:
Besides if he doesn't kill one, someone else will and I don't think you got enough coats for everyone :P
No. The die is just soldered to the IHS, just like the Core 2. That is all Fugger was confirming. The same methods for de-soldering the Core 2 will work on the i7. You can't permanently affix copper to silicon in such a way that it can't be undone, and of course sanding will work as long as you use a fine enough grain towards the end.
Finaly some pics. I did'nt think we were going to get to see any. Yep it's definately soildered on. pretty colors haha
:rolleyes: but not so little :D
Msi X58 Eclipse ... Msi Motherboard Killer has struck again :rolleyes:
:rolleyes::D
yes i found too , it's beautiful colors :D
Yes sexy chips without "roof" :ROTF:
I hope to more disuadir one now with these pics which confirms what was said Fugger :yepp:
I do not have images but that is exactly what I saw when it was separated. Looking directly at the die layers on each half.
Is it just me or do i see that there was no solder (or other heat conduction material) at the bottom left of the die?
Or did it chip off?
i guess sensitive sanding should always work.it seems ihs removal will be needed with pII :D