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Thread: Some questions about my new comp

  1. #1
    tesco's Avatar woowoo
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    Hey I haven't asked any questions here in a long time.
    I also haven't read that many posts here since the athlon xp 2500+ days either.

    So I need to know some things about current hard ware.

    First question is:

    I got a sata-300 hard drive, but the board I ordered (MSI K8N Neo4-f) is only an nforce4 non-ultra so it only supports up to sata150. So...
    1) Will I be missing out on a lot of speed or is this drive not using the full 300 anyway? (seagate 7200.9 160gb sata-300 8mb 7200rpm).
    2) Is a sata-300 drive even compatiable with sata-150 controller?

    Next question:

    I read a post by clocker (i think) in a thread somewhere not too long ago that said to just use the thermal pad that's already on the heatsink. (it's an amd athlon 64 3000+)
    I've went and put the heatsink onto the chip but am now having second thoughts and think I should have used some arctic silver 5 (is that even the latest anymore? ).
    The main reason I didn't do that in the first place is that i've never successfully removed a thermal pad without scratching the heatsink before.

    Third Question:

    If I remove the heat sink (keep in mind the computer hasn't been turned on yet) will the thermal pad be stuck to the processor as well?

    Fourth question:

    Why do boards now need 24-pin ATX connectors on the power supplys? What do the new 4 pins do?


    Thanks.


    edit: BTW, full specs if you're interested:

    MSI K8N NEO4-f
    Athlon 64 3000+
    1024mb Mushkin Ram
    XFX geforce 6600le 256mb graphics card
    160gb Seagate 7200rpm 8mbcache hard drive
    NEC DVD Burner (dual layer, 16x burning speeds, etc etc.)
    400watt 24-pin powersupply from ULTRA (not the best but I can't afford any better )
    Using my old case and fans, plus the stock heatsink with stock fan (if the fan is too loud i will attach my own fan to it)
    Last edited by tesco; 12-01-2005 at 10:26 PM.

  2. Software & Hardware   -   #2
    zapjb's Avatar Computer Abuser BT Rep: +3
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    I can only answer #3. Yup it will be stuck after burn in. But you haven't turned it on, so probably much easier to remove. Look rossco clocker is right. Just stick with the thermal pad. Most of the pastes instructions from the manufacturers say only to use if you're going to reapply every couple months. It's not recommended as a permanent solution. Good luck.


    Btw this is my 2,500 post again for like the 3rd time. Should get my 5th star again for like the 6th time. Wish I could put a lock on it.

  3. Software & Hardware   -   #3
    tesco's Avatar woowoo
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    Quote Originally Posted by zapjb
    I can only answer #3. Yup it will be stuck after burn in. But you haven't turned it on, so probably much easier to remove. Look rossco clocker is right. Just stick with the thermal pad. Most of the pastes instructions from the manufacturers say only to use if you're going to reapply every couple months. It's not recommended as a permanent solution. Good luck.


    Btw this is my 2,500 post again for like the 3rd time. Should get my 5th star again for like the 6th time. Wish I could put a lock on it.
    @ stars. I see the fifth star, congrats. Now work on the green stars.

    Thanks for the info, my current processor's temp hasn't changed since i last installed the thermal paste on it which was over a year ago...
    But, if you say the thermal pad will work better then I will try it for a while.

    Also I have another quick questions

    Fourth Question:

    Is pc3200 ram the right speed for these new 64bit processors or should I have bought something with a higher speed?

  4. Software & Hardware   -   #4
    Arctic Ceramique is probably the best thermal compound now, which is a long term paste.... I think Artic Silver 5 is as well, but Ceramique isnt conductive so you cant blow anything up.... lol.... I dont think any thermal pad is as good as either Silver 5 or Ceramique though, and Ceramique has performed best in all the reviews I have seen

    http://www.arcticsilver.com/ceramique.htm


    Apparently yes the SATA-300 is backwards compaible with SATA-150 check the SATA Quick Reference Guide

    http://www.wdc.com/en/products/sata/


    Hope this helps
    Last edited by Leeson; 12-01-2005 at 06:56 PM.

  5. Software & Hardware   -   #5
    tesco's Avatar woowoo
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    and they are backwards compatible with 150 MB/s SATA drives, too.
    Thanks for that.

    Also isn't ceramique the kind that's used for things like ram coolers because it goes sticky

  6. Software & Hardware   -   #6
    Virtualbody1234's Avatar Forum Star BT Rep: +2
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    1 and 2
    The SATA150 interface will work fine with your 300GB HDD.

    The 150 refers to the connection speed and the 300 refers to the space in GBs of the drive.

  7. Software & Hardware   -   #7
    tesco's Avatar woowoo
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virtualbody1234
    1 and 2
    The SATA150 interface will work fine with your 300GB HDD.

    The 150 refers to the connection speed and the 300 refers to the space in GBs of the drive.
    No it's not a 300gb drive, it's SATA-300 interface...

  8. Software & Hardware   -   #8
    clocker's Avatar Shovel Ready
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    Quote Originally Posted by rossco
    Hey I haven't asked any questions here in a long time.
    Yeah, we wondered about that.
    I also haven't read that many posts here since the athlon xp 2500+ days either.

    So I need to know some things about current hard ware.

    First question is:

    I got a sata-300 hard drive, but the board I ordered (MSI K8N Neo4-f) is only an nforce4 non-ultra so it only supports up to sata150. So...
    1) Will I be missing out on a lot of speed or is this drive not using the full 300 anyway? (seagate 7200.9 160gb sata-300 8mb 7200rpm).
    2) Is a sata-300 drive even compatiable with sata-150 controller?
    Yes, it backwards compatable.

    Next question:

    I read a post by clocker (i think) in a thread somewhere not too long ago that said to just use the thermal pad that's already on the heatsink. (it's an amd athlon 64 3000+)
    I've went and put the heatsink onto the chip but am now having second thoughts and think I should have used some arctic silver 5 (is that even the latest anymore? ).
    There is absolutely nothing wrong with the stock thermal pad especially when coupled with the stock HSF. AC5 is the TIM of choice if starting from scratch but I doubt you'd see a measurable difference between the two (and certainly not for a while anyway, AC5 takes @200 hrs. to cure) in your present situation.
    The main reason I didn't do that in the first place is that i've never successfully removed a thermal pad without scratching the heatsink before.
    Silly boy.
    Use AC cleaner or acetone to dissolve the pad...no need for mechanical removal.


    Third Question:

    If I remove the heat sink (keep in mind the computer hasn't been turned on yet) will the thermal pad be stuck to the processor as well?

    Fourth question:

    Why do boards now need 24-pin ATX connectors on the power supplys? What do the new 4 pins do?
    Because the new platforms/CPUs require more power and the ATX connector has sprouted more wires so the incoming current can be more efficiently distributed from the board header.
    My DFI board requires a 24 pin ATX and the 4 pin AUX and a molex AND a floppy connector.
    Consider yourself lucky.



    Thanks.


    edit: BTW, full specs if you're interested:

    MSI K8N NEO4-f
    Athlon 64 3000+
    1024mb Mushkin Ram
    160gb Seagate 7200rpm 8mbcache hard drive
    NEC DVD Burner (dual layer, 16x burning speeds, etc etc.)
    400watt 24-pin powersupply from ULTRA (not the best but I can't afford any better )
    Using my old case and fans, plus the stock heatsink with stock fan (if the fan is too loud i will attach my own fan to it)
    Hi Ross.
    "I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg

  9. Software & Hardware   -   #9
    tesco's Avatar woowoo
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    Thanks clocker. Now only question left is if the ram I got is the right speed.

    edit:
    My DFI board requires a 24 pin ATX and the 4 pin AUX and a molex AND a floppy connector.
    Consider yourself lucky.
    I have all those spare exept the 24pin atx so I would be lucky if I could use those instead.

  10. Software & Hardware   -   #10
    Quote Originally Posted by rossco
    and they are backwards compatible with 150 MB/s SATA drives, too.
    Thanks for that.

    Also isn't ceramique the kind that's used for things like ram coolers because it goes sticky

    no, thats the thermal epoxy you are thinking about, Ceramique is a thermal compound for CPU heatsinks

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