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Posts Tagged ‘CPU’

Mac Pro Early 2009 Design

August 31st, 2009
Mac Pro 2009 CPU/RAM Board

Mac Pro 2009 CPU/RAM Board

Although the outside look of the Mac Pro (and G5 for that matter) towers haven’t changed much since they first came out, the insides continue to evolve.

The 2009 Mac Pro houses the CPU(s), CPU heatsink and RAM on a single daughter card that can be easily removed with no screws.

Simliar to how the hard drives are removed, this card can be released with two levers that make removing the CPU(s) easy.

The RAM slots are located right behind the main door for easy upgrading.

The look on the inside is clean and the new black logic board looks very slick.

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Fujikura Heat Pipe – Smart Cooling

July 2nd, 2009
Heat pipe from a 15" MacBook Pro

Heat pipe from a 15" MacBook Pro

How can you keep increasingly hot CPU and GPU chips cool while making laptops thinner?

The answer is smart cooling using a combination of heat-sinks, temperature sensors and airflow.

The Fujikura heat pipe is a good example of effective laptop cooling.

Here’s how it works:

1. The hottest components on the logic board are the CPU, GPU and Northbridge. The tops of the chips are connected via thermal grease to their contact plates (1.)

2. The heat is then carried (dissipated) via “pipes.” Inside these pipes are a spiral metal filling and fibers that “draws” the heat down the line.

3. On the pipe itself, temperature sensors (2) are placed to determine how hot the system is getting. More graphics intensive apps will produce more heat and the temperature sensor will report the temp back to the system to determine fan speed.

4. The heat is this taken to a heat-sink (3) which further spreads out the heat. A fan is connected to this heat-sink and draws the heat out of the system.

Pretty cool :P

[ Fujikura ] [ Fujikura Technical Info ]

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Thermal Grease – Facts & Fiction

July 1st, 2009
MacBook processor getting new thermal grease.

MacBook processor getting new thermal grease.

Thermal grease is a paste like substance that is used to aid a components heat transfer to a heat-sink.

In other works, thermal grease helps get the heat from a chip onto a heat-sink. The heat-sink then sends the heat to a fan or dissipates (spreads) it out.

Overheating can lead to component failure so making sure processor and graphics chips stay cool is very important. If thermal paste is not applied properly, chips can overheat and fail.

Here are a few good tips to keep in mind:

1. If you remove a heat-sink from a processor to perform a repair or upgrade, always clean the old thermal grease off (using rubbing alcohol) both the chip and the heat-sink and apply new thermal grease when re-assembling. This makes sure you have a fresh tight seal (no air pockets) and good conductivity.

2. Buy the good stuff. Different thermal greases have different heat transfer properties. Silver compounds transfer heat better and keep chips cooler than standard silicon. Cheap grease can also dry our faster and lead to higher temps. We use Arctic Silver 5.

3. Cover the surface of the chip (that makes contact to the heat-sink) but don’t apply too much. Too much thermal grease will keep the heat from getting where it needs to go (the heat-sink.) Spread the grease flat so they’ll be no air pockets.

4. Some of the higher end thermal grease contains metal which conducts electricity as well. Make sure that any excess grease is cleaned off of the logic board to avoid shorts.

FYI – Thermal grease is also commonly known as thermal paste & heat-sink compound.

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Mac Pro With No Video

June 5th, 2009
Massive Heatsinks for the 2 Processors

Massive Heatsinks for the 2 Processors

We see a lot of Macs with no video. Usually it’s the GPU, RAM or an issue with video components.

It’s very rare for a Mac laptop’s CPU to fail, but it’s not uncommon in the G5 and Mac Pro towers.

In this case, we have a Mac Pro Dual Quad Core 3.0Ghz (do want!) whose symptom is no video.

After troubleshooting, GPU, RAM, logic, etc. the cause of the loss of video turned out to be one of the processors.

What causes a processor to fail? Judging by the size of the heatsinks for the processors, heat is definitely a concern, however a manufacturing defect (Intel) in the processor is probably playing a part.

This Mac is still under the Apple warranty so the processor replacement is covered.

Working on towers is always fun because the insides are so cool. Huge fans, blue logic boards, red lights and massive cooling towers. It’s like a futuristic city in there.

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