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Heat Sink Physical Installation
Procedure
This procedure describes how to install a heat sink onto a
conventional, socketed system processor. Modern CPUs require
special
cooling to ensure that they function properly, and the heat
sink must be installed correctly to ensure that it does its
job. Some processors come with an integrated heat sink and fan, and
if you are installing one of these then you do not need to follow
this procedure. I cover the installation of both passive heat sinks
and active heat sinks (those that include a fan) here.
Procedure
Overview:
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Difficulty Level: 2 (Low).
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Risk Factor: 1 (Very low). This assumes the
CPU is already in the socket, otherwise the risk of damaging the
CPU increases significantly.
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Hardware Required: Heat sink
compound.
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Software Required: None.
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Time to Perform: Less than 5 minutes
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Preparation / Warnings:
- If you have not already done so, please read the section on general
installation and assembly tips.
- This procedure assumes that the processor has already been
installed into the motherboard. You can attach some heat sinks to a
loose CPU as well, but some require the socket to secure properly
to the chip.
- If you want to double-check the markings on the CPU, for
example to make sure that it has not been remarked, you will want
of course to do this now, before you install the heat sink.
- This procedure does not provide instructions for heat sink
installation onto Pentium II processors (which are not socketed but
use the SEC
packaging format).
Procedure Steps:
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Attach Fan to Heat Sink:Some active heat sinks come with
the fan not actually attached to the heat sink. If yours is like
this, then attach the fan to the fins of the heat sink now. This is
usually done by screwing the fan into the heat sink using four
screws supplied with it.
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Apply Heat Sink Compound: Open up the heat
sink compound and apply a thin layer to the surface of the
CPU using your finger. The layer should just be thick enough to
obscure the surface of the chip. On CPUs that are totally flat, go
almost all the way to the edges. On CPUs that have a raised metal
plate in the center, apply the compound almost to the edge of the
plate; you should not try to spread it over the whole surface of
the chip, just the raised area (this is how the package is
designed). Do not apply too much compound--more is not better here,
and too much will make a huge mess when you attach the heat
sink.
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Attach Heat Sink: Place the heat sink on the
surface of the CPU. Then secure the heat sink to the processor.
Some heat sinks simply slip over the edges of the processor and
just kind of "sit there". Most newer ones use metal clips that
attach to the processor socket. To apply these, slip one of the
metal clips over the plastic nub on one side of the socket, then
stretch the clip across the CPU and over the nub on the other side.
It may take a bit of pressure to bend the metal clip so that it
will fit over the socket; this is what forces the heat sink onto
the processor to ensure good contact. Just don't press too
hard.
Warning: The suction formed by
the heat sink compound can cause the heatsink to bond tightly to
the CPU. In the next step you will be instructed to pull the heat
sink straight off the CPU without sliding it. Only do this if you
can do it without using excessive force, or you may damage the
processor.
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Check and Adjust Heat Sink Compound: Carefully
remove the heat sink, by loosening it and lifting it straight up
off the processor (don't slide it off, but bear in mind the warning
immediately above). Then look carefully at the heat sink compound
on the processor. You may see some areas where the heat sink
compound is still smooth from where you applied it with your
finger, and other areas where it has been disturbed (it may have a
stippled appearance here, like a stucco ceiling). The disturbed
areas are where the heat sink was making contact with the heat sink
compound; the smooth areas are where it was not touching. In the
areas that were not making good contact, apply a small
amount of additional compound. Then reattach the heat sink. Repeat
this step as necessary until you have good contact over most of the
surface area of the chip.
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Clean Up (If Necessary): If you're like me,
you'll apply too much heat sink compound the first few times you do
this. :^) Check around the perimeter of the CPU for extra compound
that has oozed out from between the heat sink and CPU, and wipe it
up. Do it now, because once the processor heats up the compound
becomes more liquid and will make an enormous mess.
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