When I tried to hook-up my Prometeia last week the system kept shutting down, as it booted into Windows. The Prometia temperatures read -45C, but the Epox 8RDA BIOS PCHealth, and MBM-5 screen indicated (+)45C. Thinking MBM-5 DID read negative temps, I presumed it was the CPU's temp. Upon further speculation, (+)45C shouldn't be high enough to cause the types of video anomalies I was experiencing while attempting to change values in the BIOS? And then I read a Prometeia review (from here) where MBM-5 wasn't reading/displaying negative temps. It simply read -45, as 45 in that review? I tried to scroll up, and random letters and numbers typed across the screen? I placed the included shim on the CPU, however; the resistors on the CPU's surface near the core, are higher then the shim is thick. Ergo, the micro-freezer copper head, may be causing current to travel between these resistors? This is the only explanation I have for the strange video anomalies, which occured while in the BIOS.
Has anyone ever heard of this occurring before? And would a mere (+)45C cause the types of anomalies I experienced in the BIOS. Anyway, as I'm about to reinstall the cooler, (believing inadequate contact was my problem) would adding washers to the spring-loaded mounting screws increase contact pressure, or removing them? I know it's a silly question, but for some reason I can't picture in my head what the effect will be? The manual mentions washers, but not their specific effect with regards to tightening the shi[p[if adding washers increases the micro-freezer's head upon the core? I'm about to fie the system up, and added five washers per side, however, I don't know if this is bringing the freezer-head closer to the core?




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