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#1 |
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For more information, see this thread on the Apogee review done by Lee "Robotech".
What is most interesting is that we now have some information about how badly the IHS affects temperatures! Testing with the ancient Maze3 on an Athlon64 chip with an IHS shows that it performs nearly as well as a modern Storm WB! That is, within 1C. See this post by Lee. Quite informative! Should all watercooling afficianados remove their IHS? What does this mean for future testing? Is it necessary if no one wants to remove their IHS? After all, if even ancient designs perform adequately on IHS equipped CPUs, then new designs have to be awefully bad to even register a difference in on-die temperatures. |
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#2 |
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depends on your definition of 'performs well'. We DONT know how well they perform, because the temp monitoring on such cpu's is !#@$ing useless.
Overclocking test is needed, imo. Screw the temps, get to the end result - we're beating around the bush with temperatures (and will be for some time), and the end result is the overclock. Jump straight to the conclusion, no need for the plot twist...
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#3 | |
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#4 |
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nikhsub1 believes that even though temps are not noticably different, the "focused cooling" of storm designs will always help overclocking. Maybe so?
Orkan (on another forum) notes that he sees a 100MHz increase in OC on his CPU difference between Apogee and Storm despite seeing zero change in temperature. |
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#5 | |
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http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/sho...&postcount=104
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Hypocritical Signature I tried to delete: Procooling: where scientific principles are ignored because big corporations are immune to mistakes and oversights. Last edited by Etacovda; 12-09-2005 at 05:58 PM. |
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#6 |
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Assume that all temp measurements are wrong. What do you have left?
Is overclockeability a measurement? A Storm's cooling is very localized, Apogee's is not. Too many variables; there's nothing here. |
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#7 |
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And, pray tell, what is the end PURPOSE of a waterblock ben?
Damn, theres getting interested in the science of waterblocks, then theres COMPLETELY IGNORING THEIR END TASK. "Is overclockability a measurement? A Storm's cooling is very localized, Apogee's is not." So? NOONE with a shred of a brain cares what their reported cpu temperature is. They care what their overclock is, thats what a waterblocks end purpose is. Its just that, until now, it was/is considered not scientific enough for testing purposes. I think thats out the window with the 'throw a tc on the side of an IHS edge' testing method thats doing the rounds now. If we're going to get this off-hand about how blocks should be tested, i think its perfectly valid that the only actual end varible that matters (the overclock) should be tested, even if it is imperfectly (because NOONE can call these IHS tests 'perfect'). Obviously this test would need to be done with a waterchiller etc, its not just a straight madshrimps window open, drug addled moronic l3d review - there would have to be constants involved... I never assumed all temp measurements were wrong - i said the cpu tests that Lee did were CLEARLY not showing us anything, as was shown by the maze3 test. spending too much time planning your test bed and not enough actually thinking about the end task of the DUT? Im all for testing, and getting it RIGHT - but lets not forget the end task of the damn DUT, because otherwise it wouldnt exist. As i also said in the post i linked, it wont be a be-all and end-all, its a nice side discussion whilst other things get done. Id also really like to see the mushroom shaped, single piece heat die based on a dual core and an IHS solution - but that wont be done for a while, so why not do the overclocking tests? Another side topic (im good at this) - if this was a german block tested this way, say, a year ago - theres no way in HELL anyone would accept these results. This whole thing just seems so... un-procooling like. Im looking forward to what pH's results are, actually.
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Hypocritical Signature I tried to delete: Procooling: where scientific principles are ignored because big corporations are immune to mistakes and oversights. Last edited by Etacovda; 12-09-2005 at 06:49 PM. |
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#8 |
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"What is most interesting is that we now have some information about how badly the IHS affects temperatures! Testing with the ancient Maze3 on an Athlon64 chip with an IHS shows that it performs nearly as well as a modern Storm WB! That is, within 1C. See this post by Lee. Quite informative!"
?? shown was the effect of Lee's technique, to which you have nothing to compare sorry, enough only for me to say more and better is needed by what soaring leap of the imagination was it concluded that temps in the center are the same as the edge ? or that the extent of compression would be the same ? anyone recall this image ? the 'range' at the edge is 0, 100% compression if you would ![]() it is simple and correct to observe that temps are reduced by removing an IHS, and it is generally held/true that lower temps will boost the OC (sometimes ?) for enthusiasts whose goal is OCing it would seem AMD products are mandated if removing the IHS intended no controversy |
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#9 | |
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You imply that a drop in operating temp is not worth anything unless I also spend extra time trying to wring a few MHz more out of my PC. |
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#10 |
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increased overclock stability would indicate that the chip is being cooled better in the areas it needs it, yeah? If it gets cooler in the diode area and makes no difference to the clocking of the chip, im going to go out on a limb and suggest that the slightly lower temperature will have no effect on the chips lifespan (if thats what you're after)...
If you're just talking about general cooling efficiency - then for what? so you can say that your cpus diode is colder, even though theres no tangible benefits for it being so? Watercooling is generally for 3 reasons Overclocking (obviously chip stability comes into this) Silence (again, chip stability - means you can have it slightly warmer and be slightly quieter) Bling (completely irrelevant to anything else) cooling efficiency comes directly under how far it will overclock... If its more stable (ie will clock higher) with a different waterblock, even though it shows the same temp, id call it more efficient... what is efficiency? # 1. The ratio of the effective or useful output to the total input in any system. Id underline useful here, but hey, you get the point ![]()
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#11 | |
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BTW, what is the tangible effect of an extra 100MHz on a machine that's running close to say, 3GHz already? |
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#12 |
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Right now, as the only desirable overclocking chips are AMD anyway, you should be testing AMD chips with the IHS removed. This is your audience. Unless you want to cater to those who are either too timid to butcher their overpriced CPUs or those doing this for bling, you should be doing whatever the pro-level enthusiast is doing. If, right now, this means ditching the IHS on AMD cpus, do it. If in the future, Intel is the cpu de rigueur, and IHS isn't going anywhere, then test that way.
Last edited by koslov; 12-09-2005 at 11:04 PM. |
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#13 |
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clocker: personally, im in the same boat as you - i dont care about that last 100mhz, but if you're using the machine for something intensive (ie, rendering, which i actually do use my pc for), increasing the pc's speed by 5% can mean a lot when you're doing a render/animation that will take 2 days... plus, in a dualcore, that benefit is two fold.
However, i do care about silence - so a better waterblock could theoretically let me lower my fan speed (probably pretty significantly, really) for the same overclock; allowing for the same productivity at a lower noise level. Also, a watercooling system is plain extravagance anyway - theres no justification in it, may as well get the most benefits out of it that you can.... Chip stability is the important thing. The temperature of the diode doesnt neccessarily represent that stability.
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#14 |
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CPU's overclocking ability can change over time aswell. Probably more so than the TIM joint issue. Also using the same CPU still tells us nothing more than others tests as the results are only good for that CPU.
Also I refuse to remove the IHS even on my $60 Sempron. I get what I get with what I got. This from a person using the stock AMD all aluminum heat sink though with no need to change it. ![]() |
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#15 |
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Etacovda: the end purpose is not forgotten, but the testing method may or may not give the right picture.
Eg; Lee (Robotech) test on a 32mm by 32 mm die: what did you learn? The associated CPU test: what did YOU learn? I'm taking a few days off; back Tuesday. |
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#16 | |
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How many such creatures are there anyway? At what level interest/involvement/investment does one qualify? |
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#17 |
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What's pro-cooling? Obviously, except for a handful of people here, we're all cooling amateurs.
OK, so pro-level is a silly, indefinable term. I'm talking about skilled coolers who will do pretty much everything they can within their homes/garages to realize a significant gain in temps. And using a hobby knife to remove an IHS definitely is within their capacity. Monetary investment has nothing to do with it. |
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#18 |
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Salaried position? lol. I have lost about $7,000 in my cooling adventures just to end up being satisfied with a stock $5.00 cooler.
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#19 | |
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"The road to cooling nirvana is paved with broken Visa cards." At the very least you could have a very interesting garage sale... |
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#20 |
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The point to all this furor is to find out WHAT we need to investigate and HOW we need to present it. Or even if we need to investigate!
Temps of the on-CPU diode are one metric. Another is overclockability. Add both of those with/and w/out IHS. Then, there's die-sim tests and finally simulations. Finally, we can just test overclockability. All of them have merit, it seems, and we can't single out a particular number and say "This is the ranking". The closest seems to be CPU diode and die-sim temps, but overclocking really gives an effectiveness number that trumps the other numbers. However, without testing a large sample, that overclockability is hard to trust. Blah. I think pH is on the right track, but I'm still worried about making sure the numbers are important to you guys. |
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#21 |
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all in the pot with a vigorous mix, produces goulash
until the issues are separated, and considered separately, the present mess will continue suggestion: consider die sim and CPU based testing apart - consider bare die apart (AMD only) - consider IHS clad CPUs apart (Intel only ?) I note that the IHS temp was not included as a metric this thread is an extension of the avoidance of an intellectual discussion of IHS characteristics agreed, Blah. I lost the opportunity to influence pH's track, but do hope he brings some rigor to the discussion |
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#22 | |
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As for Bill's comments I agree. What we need to investigate is which methods gives our readers the results they can use the most. The other methods we can use for our own interests I guess. I don't see overclocking as an option as the CPU's are not all equal. The results could not be compared to anything but that CPU which = useless to our readers. I don't see testing without the IHS as an option because I refuse to believe most readers here will decapitate their CPU's. Myself included. So that = useless to our readers. I don't see die sim testing as useful to our readers because die sims do not react like CPU's do. So those results are useless to our readers. Testing with the IHS with the system as stock as possible seem to only way I would think about attempting it. Especially being many coolers mounting systems are designed with the IHS's extra height in mind. The problem with this is temp monitoring and the IHS's TIM joint not only the quality of it but repeated mounting over time (forgetting all smaller variable's of course). Intels soldered on IHS might help that but still need a decent temp monitoring method. Grooving the IHS is an option but not many can get that done or are willing to risk it. That is my opinion at this point anyway. It is all ![]() |
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#23 | |
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"This is incomprehensible crap that should never be posted" I think sums your comments up nicely. Or did you mean with my test system? I'm HAPPY to do IHS testing with a grooved CPU and a diode reader to monitor effects over time. But I can't make that be on my main test bench for the simple fact that I'll destroy that CPU if I am remounting wbs on it several times per day.
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#24 |
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OC numbers don't really make sense when you consider all the variables involved. You might find that a nice hsf will outperform many a good wb simply because you're cooling the fets more. We really don't even know all the reasons why a chip will clock higher under certain conditions than under others. For the ones that we know of, there's already cpu temp, voltage, voltage stability, fet temp... even some weird phenomenon that could probably be ignored (but who knows?) such as electromigration, alpha particles, and cosmic rays. AND the relation between the factors is not simple.
I'm not saying it can't be done, but you must construct a system where at the very least, OCs vary predictably with CPU temps. jaydee, not sure exactly what you mean by "react." Results from a single CPU are no more indicative of the performance on other CPU designs than are results from a die sim. Maybe worse. Even for dies with similar geometry, every design has different hotspots. Here's a suggestion: poll your readers (not just the forum nerds) to see what they are doing. What CPU, willing to remove IHS, current cooling, etc? But keep it short and easy! You want to get as large a sample as possible. I guess a prerequisite to this is to *have* readers or even articles to read for that matter ![]() |
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#25 | |
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That is also why lasers and conduction are useless IMO and why a gave up on that other thread. Taking base plate temps is stupid IMO. You want to know how well the block cools the die not how well it cools itself. Anyway I am done with testing mumbo jumbo for a while. |
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