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Snow Tiger

macrumors 6502a
Dec 18, 2019
854
634
So it looks like 95.1ºC is my maximum on my machine... thanks

Stay as far away from the maximum temp as possible .

It will allow your Mac a greater opportunity to remain online without mandatory servicing .

Not only because you are then required to replace thermal materials , but that a cooler running machine will reduce thermal fatigue of individual components . In this case , a controller chip . Once a part has failed from thermal fatigue , all the re-thermal pasting and re-thermal gapping in the world won't help . Because the component is dead .

Normally , this not an issue most users of electronics have to worry about . But our cMPs are running for a much longer time than anyone expected , so our rigs have special needs .

So , yeah . Stay away from the max temps of components as much as possible .

This can be done with higher quality thermal materials , scheduled replacement of thermal materials , appropriately installed thermal materials , fine adjustments to third party ( like MFC ) SMC controlled system fans , the use of sensor utilities and grabbing otherwise hard to access data from terminal (like GPU temps ) . Technicians and enthusiasts like myself have a few other tricks , should we need them ( Laser / IR temperature guns used on components that have no accessible sensors , custom thermocouples so small they can be placed under heatsinks , exotic materials like graphite TIM pads ) .
 
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Tordenver

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Apr 21, 2020
19
0
Stay as far away from the maximum temp as possible .

Yes always a good reminder... but it is also good to know the specs, so you can have a better idea what is the limit of the hardware.

This can be done with higher quality thermal materials , scheduled replacement of thermal materials , appropriately installed thermal materials , fine adjustments to third party ( like MFC ) SMC controlled system fans , the use of sensor utilities and grabbing otherwise hard to access data from terminal (like GPU temps ) . Technicians and enthusiasts like myself have a few other tricks , should we need them ( Laser / IR temperature guns used on components that have no accessible sensors , custom thermocouples so small they can be placed under heatsinks , exotic materials like graphite TIM pads ) .

All good advice. Based on the information I provided, do you have a theory why my northbridge is still hot when my computer is idle?

Right now I am leaning toward amedias' idea that I may have put too much thermal paste? I read somewhere it was a better idea to spread out the paste into a very thin layer onto the chip instead of putting a drop of paste and letting it spread out with the weight/pressure when attaching the heatsink on top of it? the argument was that you might get uneven cover on the chip, or that it could spilled over, around the chip.

What do you think? How do you like to do your thermal pasting?

Thanks.
 

Snow Tiger

macrumors 6502a
Dec 18, 2019
854
634
Yes always a good reminder... but it is also good to know the specs, so you can have a better idea what is the limit of the hardware.



All good advice. Based on the information I provided, do you have a theory why my northbridge is still hot when my computer is idle?

Right now I am leaning toward amedias' idea that I may have put too much thermal paste? I read somewhere it was a better idea to spread out the paste into a very thin layer onto the chip instead of putting a drop of paste and letting it spread out with the weight/pressure when attaching the heatsink on top of it? the argument was that you might get uneven cover on the chip, or that it could spilled over, around the chip.

What do you think? How do you like to do your thermal pasting?

Thanks.
I just answered this question this morning for a MP6,1 user .

 
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