i7 920 CPU doesn't come with thermal paste for the cooler?

9,853

Solution 1

Sounds wierd, the i7 should be shipped with heat sinks having thermal compound pre-applied to the base. Are you sure there isn't any on the bottom of the heat sink? Or a thermal pad installed?

Solution 2

Thermal paste is definitely needed, they're just being cheap if they don't put any on. Get some Artic Silver, from the tests I've seen it's the best.

Running a CPU that high end without it will result in a dead CPU very fast.

Solution 3

Most vendor-supplied heatsinks come with pads on the heatsink which do the job of thermal transfer compound. There would have been a cover on the bottom of the heatsink protecting it until you installed it.

Solution 4

I have an i7 920 and came across this problem. The thermal pads on the bottom of the stock cooler are fine without adding any extra paste. If you want to apply some third-party paste though, make sure you remove the pads first with a little rubbing alcohol on a cloth.

"The reality is that if it shipped without the thermal compound, they might blame a burn out on user error"

I don't think that the above advice is anywhere near reality on a newly-purchased chip. But if the chip didn't work because you've clogged up your socket with thermal grease, that's another story!

Solution 5

Make sure there is no thermal pad before you put on thermal paste. Intel retail box CPUs will have a thermal pad on the bottom of the heatsink, and if that is the case, you do NOT want to also apply thermal paste.

If you feel that the thermal pad is not good enough, and you want to use some aftermarket paste, be sure that you remove the pad first, and clean the base of the heatsink well before installing the paste.

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Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • user3183
    user3183 over 1 year

    I installed my new i7 920 CPU and cooler that came with it. It didn't come with any thermal paste, so I guess it is not required?

    I really hate these snap-in 'screws', they pop out easy!

    • Keck
      Keck over 14 years
      Future intel "stock" heatsink advice: They will come with a pre-applied thermal pad on the bottom, but it's really not the greatest. Look into Arctic Silver 5 or Artic Cooling's MX-2. They are less than $8-9 shipped and are well worth it. Secondly, install the CPU and cooler BEFORE you install the motherboard, it's a lot easier to ensure a good solid lock with the intel "push-pins".
  • pavsaund
    pavsaund over 14 years
    Can't go wrong with Artic Silver
  • user3183
    user3183 over 14 years
    but how can they ship it without it? And the instructions doesn't mention anything so it won't void the warranty w/o thermal will it?
  • user3183
    user3183 over 14 years
    I didn't look, I just popped in the cooler after installing the cpu. ok so it is there by default.
  • juanefren
    juanefren over 14 years
    I cannot recall if there is a sticker of some sort covering the pre-applied compound... if so, you may need to remove the cooler so you can take the covering off and re-apply... but if there wasn't removing the cooler now will just make things worse.
  • Axxmasterr
    Axxmasterr over 14 years
    The reality is that if it shipped without the thermal compound, they might blame a burn out on user error. It all depends on how solidly a company wants to support their own product. Most companies will make something like this right but you'd have to scream some.
  • Oskar Duveborn
    Oskar Duveborn over 14 years
    Generally there is no sticker on the default Intel heatsinks of today, just a thermal compound and sometimes a huge plastic cover that's basically part of the packaging (that you cannot by mistake install with on ;)
  • TM.
    TM. over 14 years
    Make sure that there is NOT a thermal pad. "Thermal paste is definitely needed" is bad advice, if a thermal pad was also in place (which it would be if it was a retail box).
  • Johnny Sayasane
    Johnny Sayasane over 13 years
    True, but are there negative effects if both are present?
  • TM.
    TM. over 12 years
    @Boon yes there are definitely negative effects if both are present. Heat transfer goes way down.