this is a great guide, I may do it to my 2160.
conflicting posts though... is removing IHS only good for air + water cooling?
I am going to be using DICE (with one of Duniek's pots) and if it makes no difference then I will just leave the top on
this is a great guide, I may do it to my 2160.
conflicting posts though... is removing IHS only good for air + water cooling?
I am going to be using DICE (with one of Duniek's pots) and if it makes no difference then I will just leave the top on
I get the feeling that you could leave your top on. With such extreme cooling as Dice. It doesnt matter much if you get minus 46 or minus 50.
You also make your cpu much more fragile if remove the ihs, not so good for exprimental mounting metods used with a heavy Dice container.
I only got 2-4 C better cooling on air with the ihs removed, I think on Dice you probobly wont even notice any difference.
But anyway, I could be wrong. Since these chips are so inexpensive you can afford to gamble a bit with em.
MotherBoard: GigaByte G33M DS2R
Memory: 2x1 Gb HyperX DDR2-9600, 1200 Mhz
Cpu: Intel e2160 @ 3,6 Ghz on Air
Vga: XFX 4870 XXX
Cooling: Ninja Mini, 2x Ximatek 120mm, 1x Zalman 80mm , Stock Gpu
Case: Antec Fusion Remote
How I removed IHS:
I got ~8C lower temps, but with less noise (Freezer 7 Pro @1800rpm, before it was 2300-2500rpm). With same amount of noise, I guess difference would be bigger.
In begining:
After 20min:
You could notice a little scratch in the upper right corner, fortunately there isn't anything. I was very lucky, CPU is still 100% stable.
Very important thing is to remove this:
as stated in this thread:
http://thetechrepository.com/showthread.php?t=23
That was first attempt, because I didn't have cooler with bolt-thru mechanism, base didn't touch core, so i had to wait 'till I manage to work this out.
2 days ago, I attempted to finish this mod:
First I isolated mbo from getting scrached.
Further:
How it looks like from above.
Now, some foam to protect core and to distribute force evenly:
It was necessary to tighten the upper two screws much more than lower two, because cooler was hanging a bit and contact was bad, temps rose up to 70C.
Unfortunately, I don't have pictures with cooler instaled, I was pretty nervous to get this done.
In the end, CPU needs slightly less voltage for 3200MHz: instead 1.384V it is enough 1.368V. Also, it is stable on 3350MHz @1.44V, bit it's too much for 24/7, altough temps are 55-56C, just like 3200MHz @1.384V prior to IHS removal.
SRV thats an awesome post!
What cooler are you running? Did you get through the fsb wall? what motherboard are you running?
Drive it like you stole it
definately awesome post! now i'm gonna try on my pentium 4! with a torch of course.
You can use boiled water, much safer.
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...ht=ihs+removal
>i5-3570K
>Asrock Z77E-ITX Wifi
>Asus GTX 670 Mini
>Cooltek Coolcube Black
>CM Silent Pro M700
>Crucial M4 128Gb Msata
>Cooler Master Seidon 120M
Hell yes its a mini-ITX gaming rig!
hmm, this might be a good idea...
because i lapped 2x e2160 which was concaved till its pretty much flat, but load temps did not change before and after mod, idle temp improved by 1~2c, will try removing the IHS when i reinstall my rig in the next 3 or 4 days
IMHO sanding off the IHS is a better idea because the part which is glued to the CPU(near the edges of the package) is still there and could protect the core(s) from breaking due to too much and/or unevenly distributed force applied from the cooler. Also the process itself seems safer as there's no risk of cutting off some of the processor's internal circuirty.Just be careful not to sand off some of the core along with the IHS
Bookmarks