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Tom's Hardware > Forum > CPU & Components > CPUs > [Solved] Removing Thermal Paste

[Solved] Removing Thermal Paste

Forum CPU & Components : CPUs [Solved] Removing Thermal Paste

Best answer from MU_Engineer.

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So I just recently decided to bump my 955 up to 3.4 (very moderate oc) and my cpu was at 60c with the stock fan being noisy as all hell. Now I realize that I shouldn't have tried much of an OC on a stock fan/heatsink.. but hey, I made a mistake.

I just ordered a coolermaster 212+ and some as5, and I am awaiting its delivery. While the coolermaster bit looks a bit intimidating, there are enough review out there to help me out.

My question is, whats the best way to go removing the already placed (from the stock hs) thermalpaste? I have seen comments about goo-gon, alcohol, coffee filters, and some that just say wipe it off with a dryer sheet.

My question is, what is the easiest way to remove the already applied thermalpaste?

Thanks

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I like alcohol swabs and a coffee filter but no need to go out and buy them if you don't have them just use some rubbing alcohol on a coffee filter or any cloth that won't leave lint behind. Bounty paper towels work good too.

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Best answer

snoogins wrote :

So I just recently decided to bump my 955 up to 3.4 (very moderate oc) and my cpu was at 60c with the stock fan being noisy as all hell. Now I realize that I shouldn't have tried much of an OC on a stock fan/heatsink.. but hey, I made a mistake.

I just ordered a coolermaster 212+ and some as5, and I am awaiting its delivery. While the coolermaster bit looks a bit intimidating, there are enough review out there to help me out.

My question is, whats the best way to go removing the already placed (from the stock hs) thermalpaste? I have seen comments about goo-gon, alcohol, coffee filters, and some that just say wipe it off with a dryer sheet.

My question is, what is the easiest way to remove the already applied thermalpaste?

Thanks



CPU thermal compound requires an organic (read: hydrocarbon-based) solvent to dissolve. The less water the solvents have, the better, as water is inorganic and will not dissolve thermal compound. Hydrocarbon and alcohol-based solvents with 10-15% or less water by volume work well. Apply the solvent to something lint-free like a cloth or coffee filter and then rub off the thermal compound. A good solvent will make the thermal paste dissolve quickly and rub off very easily.

My favorite solvent for removing thermal compound is 91% rubbing alcohol (9% water.) It stinks a lot less than most other organic solvents, it works very well, and a pint of it costs about a dollar at most drugstores. A pint will be enough to remove thermal paste from dozens and dozens of heatsinks. Most running alcohol is 71% alcohol/29% water and does not remove thermal paste very well, so specifically look for the 91% stuff.

Other solvents I've used are:
- Goof-Off. This is made of benzene derivatives (toluene, xylene) and smells to high heaven. You do not want to use this indoors and you do not want to put your used cloth/rag soaked in the stuff in the trash indoors either. It comes in metal cans at the hardware store and costs several dollars for a 8 or 16-ounce container. It works very well.
- Denatured alcohol, which is 90-95% ethanol, a few percent water, and a few percent gasoline or methanol to make the mixture non-potable (else you would have to pay beverage alcohol tax on it and it would be very expensive.) This works very well and has very little odor. The only downside to using denatured alcohol is that it generally comes in quart or gallon cans and you'll never use all of that for removing thermal grease unless you plan on removing hundreds or thousands of heatsinks' worth of grease.

Other stuff that should in theory work, but I've never tried
- Mineral spirits/paint thinner. Cheap, widely available, but very stinky.
- E85 motor fuel. Basically the same thing as denatured alcohol and cheaper, but hard to buy in small quantities.
- Straight toluene or xylene. These will work as they are what make up Goof-Off. You can buy them in the paint aisle at a hardware store. Goof-Off comes in smaller containers, so that's why I have used Goof-Off instead of these chemicals. These are also very stinky.
- Diethyl or methylethyl ether. This is the main component in engine starter fluid and is a highly-volatile liquid. It stinks to high heaven, forms an extremely flammable vapor cloud in the air, and you sometimes have trouble buying it since it is a component in methamphetamine production. It is a very effective organic solvent, so it should work well for dissolving thermal compound.

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