Direwolf
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- Joined
- Jul 1, 2003
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Hmm...thought I might enlist a little help on this one.
I finally decided to go and get myself a decent heatsink, as my current one was cobbled together from other ones and wasn't performing as well as I would have liked. I had to squeeze it in since its so much larger (this involved actually taking a hack saw to my case ), but its seated properly and in contact with the chip with a shim and compound.
I've got it set on high and the damn things still cooking as badly as it was under my old jury-rigged one (about 54C), but I'm running a 2600 and this heatsink supposedly can handle up to a 3400. I got it off of NewEgg, one of the few online retailers I trust, so I don't think false advertising is a factor.
This leads me to think one of the two has happened: by some error this thing isn't performing up to snuff, even though it seems to be fully functional.
Or when I originally bought my chip way back when, it wasn't actually a 2600 but a chip capable to being overclocked to a 2600, a fact which would explain its never being detected properly by my hardware and easily remedied by getting a new chip.
Anyone have any thoughts on this kind of thing?
I finally decided to go and get myself a decent heatsink, as my current one was cobbled together from other ones and wasn't performing as well as I would have liked. I had to squeeze it in since its so much larger (this involved actually taking a hack saw to my case ), but its seated properly and in contact with the chip with a shim and compound.
I've got it set on high and the damn things still cooking as badly as it was under my old jury-rigged one (about 54C), but I'm running a 2600 and this heatsink supposedly can handle up to a 3400. I got it off of NewEgg, one of the few online retailers I trust, so I don't think false advertising is a factor.
This leads me to think one of the two has happened: by some error this thing isn't performing up to snuff, even though it seems to be fully functional.
Or when I originally bought my chip way back when, it wasn't actually a 2600 but a chip capable to being overclocked to a 2600, a fact which would explain its never being detected properly by my hardware and easily remedied by getting a new chip.
Anyone have any thoughts on this kind of thing?