Does what Thermal Paste you use, REALLY matter?

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
  • People still argue over which Thermal Paste is the best... today I test 5 different Thermal Paste brands to see if the more expensive TIMs really make a different... Spoiler... yes it matters... BUT probably not for the reasons you may think!
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Komentáře • 3,4K

  • @falldownandgoboom
    @falldownandgoboom Před 18 dny +439

    Arctic Silver 5 is made by Arctic Silver, Inc. They make several products. None of them are coolers although they did originally make a cooler when the company was founded in California. The company that makes MX-4 is Arctic , original founded as Arctic Cooling, a German-Swiss company. They make coolers, fans, monitor mounts, a lot of other stuff, and MX-6 thermal paste - their newest and best - which is the product you should have included in your comparison along with MX-4.

    • @simmysims9209
      @simmysims9209 Před 18 dny +7

      I didn't know that and I was working in computer store when those products where new 😮

    • @michaelhemric5228
      @michaelhemric5228 Před 18 dny +9

      I really want to know what mx-6 does here I like it way better than mx-4 it doesn't pull AM4 CPUs out the board anywhere near as bad as 4 does and it doesn't seem to dry out near as bad

    • @user-lx1nh7gg8o
      @user-lx1nh7gg8o Před 18 dny +12

      would have been nice to see mx-6 included that's what I'm using

    • @sviktor4
      @sviktor4 Před 18 dny +16

      @@michaelhemric5228 MX-6 is thicker, drier than MX-4, it may conduct the heat better than MX-4 when you have bad contact, but its the opposite if you have good contact when the paste doesn't really need to fill the gaps. It's like when you use 1.00mm copper or 0.25mm aluminium sheet the aluminium is still better despite the fact that the copper the better heat conductor, that is why the thickness matter, and that is why the m/W/K on a product basically don't matter.
      In my testing MX-6 worst or equal than MX-4, MX-5 was the best, but it was very sticky.
      For CPU-s I stuck with MX-4, because it just work and you can forget about it for 3-4 years, for me not worth experimenting.

    • @philmarsden9594
      @philmarsden9594 Před 17 dny +2

      @@sviktor4 i still love mx2, i got a box of it in 18

  • @jeremymarsh569
    @jeremymarsh569 Před 18 dny +855

    FYI Jay, Arctic Cooling GmbH and Arctic Silver Inc. are two different companies

  • @Michael-di6ss
    @Michael-di6ss Před 17 dny +239

    "Butt plug that shoots out of there, craps all over your CPU like Taco Bell." -- Shirt worthy quote right there

    • @killer01ws6
      @killer01ws6 Před 16 dny +8

      Coming soon for sponsorship considerations by Jay.. Butt Plugs and Taco Bell.

    • @me0262
      @me0262 Před 16 dny +2

      Look into Jim Jeffries - I Swear to God - Warehouse, great story about something exploding outward.

    • @michaeldavis9772
      @michaeldavis9772 Před 16 dny +2

      Where do we sign the petition to have this shirt made?? /s LMAO You guys made my night...

    • @hiriotapa1983
      @hiriotapa1983 Před 15 dny +2

      Jay, got experience with butt plugs shooting out? 😂

    • @MagiconIce
      @MagiconIce Před 13 dny

      Jay always pronouncing when he is not sponsoring something. That one was crystal clear lol

  • @Falcon_Northwest
    @Falcon_Northwest Před 18 dny +351

    We switched to Kingpin KPx about 2 years ago after conducting our own similar shoot-out, with similar results to Jay's findings. We have thousands of systems in the field now with it and have been very pleased. No dry outs so far. Definitely more expensive than some of the bulk stuff, but we can happily vouch for it.

    • @Lailoken2
      @Lailoken2 Před 18 dny +18

      Really nice to hear from you guys, let's us know you're paying attention, which increases credibility in my book. Maybe one day when I get off this poverty type beat I'll be able to afford one of your systems. Good looking.

    • @AustnTok
      @AustnTok Před 18 dny +3

      Give Prolimatech PK-3 a shot. I got lower temps than KPx and Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut by about 1c-2c on average

    • @ImprezzionOfficial
      @ImprezzionOfficial Před 18 dny

      ​@@AustnTokPK3 deserves more attention really. It's by far the best paste I've ever used and I always have a 30gr tube handy these days. It doesn't dry out, spreads easily, it's expensive as hell but still. It's so good..

    • @kazuviking
      @kazuviking Před 18 dny +1

      @@ImprezzionOfficial Unless you get a 12 year old tube.

    • @AustnTok
      @AustnTok Před 18 dny +3

      @ImprezzionOfficial yup. Expensive, but so worth it.i used Thermal Grizzly prior to using PK-3, but when I got my 14900ks, i tested a few pastes, and PK-3 came out ahead. I have another build with a 12600k running a 5.2ghz all core OC. Under a full load, PK-3 and KPx didn't show any difference. They both peaked exactly the same. (Can't remember the exact number) although under a full 320w load with the 14900ks, PK-3 peaked at 90⁰ while KPx peaked at 91⁰

  • @user-bs2dk3ju4k
    @user-bs2dk3ju4k Před 18 dny +246

    Something that probably should have been in that lineup would be Noctuas NT-H1/2 because Noctuas coolers are extremely popular and most people probably use the thermal paste than comes with them

    • @faticecr3am
      @faticecr3am Před 17 dny +38

      For sure I was surprised to not see it in the comparison.

    • @robperry28
      @robperry28 Před 17 dny +21

      As someone who has used noctuas thermal paste for two decades, I think it falls between arctic and KPX in pricing, but nearly identical performance. As for longevity, well I think two decades of never feeling a need to change paste speaks for itself. lol Clean up is similar to the rest, little bit of alcohol and something to wipe with.

    • @WayneReynolds.
      @WayneReynolds. Před 17 dny +3

      Right ? That's the nt-h1 is what I'm using n got all my friends to use .. i came here to see how it compares and surprised it isn't on the list .. such a popular paste

    • @natecartwright2319
      @natecartwright2319 Před 17 dny +3

      This! i went with the h2 and have been loving the cool temps. my 5yr old gpu feels brand new now

    • @jwdickieson
      @jwdickieson Před 17 dny

      I use either kingpins or Noctuas those are the two brands I've been using for a long time now, used to be an IC diamond guy

  • @Taluvian
    @Taluvian Před 16 dny +36

    Computer I built 15 years ago with AS , air cooled, 20% overclock, still running like a champ.

    • @geronimo5537
      @geronimo5537 Před 10 dny +2

      ArticSilver5 is the gold standard in my opinion. It has always worked on everything. And I have built dozens of pc desktops. You will need to replace the paste once a year as it will fry into thin air leaving big open patches. Usually around one to two years. I have personally move onto thermal grizzly. It works great, price sucks, but it goes on like clay and stays.

    • @Taluvian
      @Taluvian Před 10 dny +4

      @@geronimo5537 Not sure why you have had to replace the paste. Like I said, 15 years overclocked 20%, never have replaced the paste. PC is running like a champ.

    • @KingmeJitesh1975
      @KingmeJitesh1975 Před 9 dny

      Which paste

    • @overdriver99
      @overdriver99 Před 9 dny

      you mean Artic Silver ? did you use Artic Silver 5? or 3?

    • @KingmeJitesh1975
      @KingmeJitesh1975 Před 9 dny +1

      @@overdriver99 which paste you use

  • @rexdomi1339
    @rexdomi1339 Před 18 dny +181

    Regarding the pricing of the Thermal Grizzly paste. It is that expensive on Amazon true, but he also sells through his partner caseking in Germany where the Price for a 11,1g Tube is 24,9€/27,8$ which comes down to 2,24€/2,5$ per gram which is definitely more realistic. Unfortunately they only ship inside Europe but for every fellow European out there dont buy the paste on Amazon but rather on caseking.

    • @MRhankylolka
      @MRhankylolka Před 18 dny +1

      Im bouht nothing from caseking in 15 years living in europe😂

    • @fieserniesel8486
      @fieserniesel8486 Před 18 dny +5

      Thermal Grizzly has a Shop as well, you can deliver directly there

    • @simmysims9209
      @simmysims9209 Před 18 dny +4

      Aquatuning sells it too. Best cooling shop 🤘

    • @Scytian1
      @Scytian1 Před 17 dny +1

      Amazon is still cheaper if you have Prime. 5€ for delivery is making Caseking price much worse.

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 17 dny +9

      @@Scytian1 "Amazon is still cheaper if you have Prime." So if you are already paying Amazon for shipping even when you dont order anything.

  • @maSVault
    @maSVault Před 18 dny +878

    I prefer Elmers glue

  • @GT_PC_Gaming
    @GT_PC_Gaming Před 17 dny +31

    ArcticSilver 5 isn't difficult to get out of the tube... It's actually one of the easier ones to squeeze out and to spread... If your ArcticSilver 5 is difficult to squeeze out of the tube or to spread, then it means it's dried out, and won't perform as well.

    • @TiaKatt
      @TiaKatt Před 16 dny +7

      Yeah, while it was certainly a pain to clean after I made a mounting error, the Arctic Silver 5 I used on my last rig was definitely not thick like that.

    • @john_in_phoenix
      @john_in_phoenix Před 16 dny +3

      I noticed that as well.

    • @TaylorTEK
      @TaylorTEK Před 14 dny +3

      I agree, i just pulled out a tube that's been sitting in my garage for 4 years and its not thick and runs out just fine. Definitely a pain to clean though but honestly you shouldn't need to repaste your cpu/gpu very often for it to even matter. I've always got great results with it, never had a problem with it running out and frying the mb either although i would prefer paste that I don't have to worry about that. Still got a big tube of AS5 and some MX4 so ill stick to those until it drys out and probably try the kingpin next.

    • @GT_PC_Gaming
      @GT_PC_Gaming Před 14 dny +1

      @@TaylorTEK I tried MX4 once, and had bad results with it (probably just me not being used to thicker paste). These days I use Kryonaut and am happy with it. I even repasted my old GTX 1080 Ti with it. KPx is probably fine too, but I haven't tried it yet.

    • @Rimmer666
      @Rimmer666 Před 8 dny +2

      Yes Artic Silver is ALWAYS easy out of the tube. Been using it for 15 yesrs. Jay-Z tube myst have been faulty.

  • @jakesnow96
    @jakesnow96 Před 18 dny +121

    Am I the only one who noticed the EVGA 4090 fans spinning randomly?

    • @a.g.jordaniii5025
      @a.g.jordaniii5025 Před 18 dny +4

      Nope, he has it turned on 😂

    • @dslynx
      @dslynx Před 18 dny +21

      I liked how the fans aren't even synchronized, each fan just does whatever it wants.

    • @johnt.848
      @johnt.848 Před 18 dny +4

      @@dslynx The third fan has a different power source to the first two.

    • @BigRed62979
      @BigRed62979 Před 18 dny +20

      It is their iCX technology, they place thermal sensors all over the card and only activates the individual fans as required by the area under it.

    • @bluegizmo1983
      @bluegizmo1983 Před 18 dny +4

      That's caused by poorly set fan curves for the GPU.

  • @dougkoski
    @dougkoski Před 18 dny +48

    I've been using MX4 because of the combination of price & longevity. Glad to see it holds up fairly well all things considered!

    • @Reirainsong
      @Reirainsong Před 14 dny +1

      Switched to MX6 here after seeing it holds well over time (Something MX5 failed and was discontinued for). So far, so good, and its increased viscosity compared to 4 helps with bare die application on GPUs.

    • @ivanaj1147
      @ivanaj1147 Před 13 dny +2

      Try Noctua NT-H2

    • @kanuh
      @kanuh Před 13 dny

      Sadly in Amazon a lot of counterfeit are sold so I'd rather buy a good Chinese brand than a Fake mx4

    • @Xbc971
      @Xbc971 Před 10 dny +1

      mx4 burns really fast even on my laptop 5-7 months max ... i switched to NT-H1/2 аnd quite happy with the result 5 degrees difference and burns way slower

    • @Reirainsong
      @Reirainsong Před 9 dny

      Modern thermal paste doesn't chemically degrade or dry out under conditions found in a PC, as the suspension is intentionally made very hard to evaporate. Arctic rates the MX series for temperatures over 200 degrees. The rise in temperatures is likely caused by loosely fitting cooler and the gap between cooler and chip shrinking and expanding with temperature fluctuations, causing paste to be pumped out. Small size of bare chips without IHS also plays a role. Use more paste, even around the chip, not just on it, so that no air would enter the gap, and try screwing the cooler as tightly as possible.

  • @LucaBerg22
    @LucaBerg22 Před 17 dny +22

    I bought a 10cc syringe of a white industrial thermal paste used for transistors and rectifiers like 15 years ago, 4$, and that's what I've been using since then. Never had an issue. And it's at least 15 years-old... 🤷

    • @andygozzo72
      @andygozzo72 Před 9 dny +3

      standard zinc oxide+silicone, i bet?

  • @TheRaidenRaiden
    @TheRaidenRaiden Před 18 dny +248

    Never thought it actually made any difference, unless it was a really, really cheap one

    • @LifeInJambles
      @LifeInJambles Před 18 dny +55

      It technically does, but not enough to actually matter outside of special circumstances. Main thing that matters, like Jay was saying, is how well it holds up over time and how easy it is to apply. As long as you don't get cheap nonsense.

    • @TheRaidenRaiden
      @TheRaidenRaiden Před 18 dny +6

      @@LifeInJambles yeah, exactly, with cheaper pastes I saw a faster reduction in performance and had to repaste way sooner than expected

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Před 18 dny +6

      @@TheRaidenRaiden Yeah, any name brand paste will be fine, atleast for a while...The more expensive pastes will stay good for much longer though...I use kryonaut because I have the extra money and I like supporting Derbauer...I did buy a tube of Insignia brand paste from Best Buy one time because it was all they had and I needed something right then...It was the absolute worst thermal paste I have ever used! I think toothpaste would conduct heat better than that stuff! lol

    • @falkwulf3842
      @falkwulf3842 Před 18 dny

      @@brucepreston3927 Was it the white stuff. I tried some insignia stuff from Best Buy and It was white looked like white acrylic paint, spread about as good as frozen Peanut butter and cooled like I wasnt using any TIM at all. And the cleanup cost me a half a box of Qtips and a full bottle of 93% Iso. Sound like the stuff you were using?

    • @blandeauxfillaskii7344
      @blandeauxfillaskii7344 Před 18 dny +3

      @@TheRaidenRaiden cheap chinese GD-900 ftw

  • @AlyxSharkBite-2000
    @AlyxSharkBite-2000 Před 18 dny +317

    MX-6 Would have been cool to see compared to MX-4

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před 18 dny +15

      Mx6 is much easier to spread, basically the same cooling aswell and its very cheap too

    • @kaupaxup
      @kaupaxup Před 18 dny +8

      @@WayStedYou how do you find it lasts? just posted a different comment there, been seeing my GPU temps rising a few months after application. Not a lot, but the hotspot has risen from +6C to +15C on full load over the past while.

    • @NinjAsylum
      @NinjAsylum Před 18 dny +10

      and MX-5 .. and Corsair's new paste is supposedly REALLY good. Would have liked to see a test with that.

    • @markrowe8824
      @markrowe8824 Před 18 dny +6

      I've just gone from MX-4 to MX-6 together with Arctic thermal pads in my first gen PS4 and after a week it's definitely running cooler and quieter than before. 🤔🤔

    • @frankmjr6571
      @frankmjr6571 Před 18 dny +18

      @@NinjAsylumI believe the MX-5 has been discontinued. Issues with the paste separating. My first tube I bought was that way. Started out runny until I squeezed out a bit. Seemed to work well though. Now I have MX-6

  • @BigBear--
    @BigBear-- Před 16 dny +12

    My go to is Thermal Grizzly. Easy to work with. Performs great. Lasts forever. It's also not "expensive". 1 gram is a huge amount for personal builds. That's enough to build like 3-4 systems, because you don't need mutch of it for a good application. Especially if using the "cake frosting" method, with the included spatula. So $9-10 is next to nothing, knowing you're getting quality, performance, longevity, and an easy install/removal experience. I wouldn't mind using the Kingpin stuff either. I'm just used to Thermal Grizzly at this point, and like the additional install accessories.

    • @Lurch-Bot
      @Lurch-Bot Před 13 dny +1

      I buy Noctua because they understand why pre-spreading is a bad idea. Takes a lot of study in physics to understand that. I want the chemist formulating my thermal paste to have had that training.

    • @brianfox340
      @brianfox340 Před 12 dny

      The most expensive doesn't mean much if it pales in comparison to the TAX on the CPU you're using it on.

  • @z0lid
    @z0lid Před 18 dny +86

    @JayzTwoCents Wish you had included some of the "new" thermal sheets in this. They are supposedly lasting forever, and no messy application.

    • @deprydation
      @deprydation Před 18 dny +5

      Only problem with including the thermal graphene based sheets is that they don't qualify as a "paste", but more of a thermal transfer "medium" like a GPU's thermal pads.

    • @BrockDM1
      @BrockDM1 Před 17 dny +9

      Second this. Would have loved to see how it compared. Even if it's not a paste it's still functioning the same

    • @swervedx
      @swervedx Před 17 dny +1

      I want to see some tests with those as well they are interesting

    • @yensteel
      @yensteel Před 17 dny +3

      @@z0lid Even if it's 5c hotter it could be a boon for server, set-it-and-forget-it usages. A great solution to make a build for your parents imo. They're gonna use it until the CPU fan dies before upgrading.

    • @JonesCoCrew
      @JonesCoCrew Před 17 dny +3

      id love to see how the sheets compare to paste apps

  • @exxor9108
    @exxor9108 Před 18 dny +44

    Being as Roman puts the R&D effort into his products, and most everyone has no complaints because the product is good, then I'd say that the price of admission is well worth it. If I have to fork out a relatively decent chunk of my money for the product, and it delivers, maybe over-delivers, then its worth it in the end.

    • @bartshearouse3008
      @bartshearouse3008 Před 18 dny +2

      I agree

    • @malphadour
      @malphadour Před 16 dny

      It's honestly not worth it. A lot of people use it for the flex or becuase they think that at that price it has to be the best. It is really on a par with nh-2 and mx-6 - maybe 1c better at best. It doesn't pump out, but neither do those other two - I would never buy it or recommend it to clients, however if they want to buy it i won't tell them they have bought badly - just expensively.

  • @woodlanditguy2951
    @woodlanditguy2951 Před 17 dny +17

    I love Thermal Grizzly and it is my go-to compound. I bought 2 tubes like 4 years ago and still haven't used all mine up.
    $9 a gram isn't bad at all, I have NEVER had to replace the paste on an IHS unless I had to replace the cooler on a CPU for an unrelated reason. I have also used Thermal Grizzly on GPU coolers.
    Most the PCs I build are for Engineers that do CAD/CAM workloads. I typically build / rebuild their systems every 3-4 years. In the 100s of systems I have built, rebuilt or serviced, I have yet to have any issues with Thermal Grizzly as long as it was applied correctly in the first place. Even in cases where it was over applied and it was squishing out the sides, I still haven't had thermal issues (just a mess to clean up).

    • @cromefire_
      @cromefire_ Před 15 dny +1

      And for those kind of regular systems, just use their cheaper stuff, that's what Roman always recommends because he himself knows that the expensive stuff is at most slightly better. And a lot of the 9$ is probably from taxes as well, as it has to be imported from the EU, it's definitely cheaper over here.

  • @HectorQuien
    @HectorQuien Před 18 dny +56

    I'm still rocking a tube of Arctic Silver 5 til it runs out. The stuff does what it's supposed to and it lasts forever. Can't complain.

    • @Spudz76
      @Spudz76 Před 18 dny

      Technically the carrier goo expires and old paste turns to something more like bird poop and it impossible to evenly spread, or gets "juicy" as the suspended solids coagulate, and clumpy particles do not lay down as thin (microscopically), thus worse performance. However if you meant lasts forever once installed, yeah sort of if ~7 years is "forever" and you never take it apart again.

    • @WizDumbDumb
      @WizDumbDumb Před 18 dny +2

      Exactly artic silver OG is the only way to go

    • @aliosanlou4425
      @aliosanlou4425 Před 18 dny +1

      I think the mx 4 is now the best value to performance ratio

    • @laurg5379
      @laurg5379 Před 17 dny +1

      True. 😊

  • @nexy84
    @nexy84 Před 18 dny +39

    Bit surprised that Jay didn't include a thermal paste from Noctua... I always used the included NT-H1 while using Noctua coolers, and then bought a separate NT-H2 when switched to an AIO. Another reason for choosing the NT-H2 was that I switched to AM5, and Noctua had an AM5 edition of the thermal paste, so the box also included a thermal paste guard for AM5 CPUs. I like when everything's included.

    • @GrayReactsYT
      @GrayReactsYT Před 18 dny

      Have you tried noctua on a gpu just curious I had to switch because it would melt off gpu with 1-2 month period

    • @nexy84
      @nexy84 Před 18 dny

      @@GrayReactsYT No, I only used Noctua thermal pastes on CPUs.

    • @wallywest2360
      @wallywest2360 Před 18 dny +5

      @@GrayReactsYT I ran NT-H2 on my GPU with a water block for over a year, no issues.

    • @AlexanderNecheff
      @AlexanderNecheff Před 18 dny +4

      Noctua pastes are good stuff. Definitely better than Arctic MX-4 but probably wouldn't be a significant departure from the trend shown in this video.

    • @AlexanderNecheff
      @AlexanderNecheff Před 18 dny

      @@GrayReactsYT I have used NT-H1 on a bare die CPU (so similar to GPU application) and it was mostly fine. The one challenge I had was that the NT-H1 was a little thicker and therefore more difficult to spread/seat the cooler on evenly. A minor nit but if you want absolute ease of installation, Arctic MX-4 or MX-6 is very easy to apply to bare dies.

  • @coisasnatv
    @coisasnatv Před 13 dny +5

    I still use the good old white silicone heat sink compound. I have super heavy amps from the 70's and 80's with this stuff and it still does the job to this day. It doesn't dry out, it doesn't need to be replaced, it just works.

  • @megachonk9440
    @megachonk9440 Před 18 dny +42

    I replaced a cooler in 2022 that had never been so much as loosened since 2013. I still had the tube of Arctic Silver 5 that I had used to apply it. Neither the paste in the tube (which I did not use again) nor the paste on that old I5-3570K were dry. It had spent those 9 years in a vertical orientation, overclocked to its limit, and spent at least 75% of the time powered on. I've used AS-5 on other applications and it doesn't run or somehow leak out. My current PC uses whatever Corsair applies on the H150i Elite Capellix 360mm AIO. Full coverage with no mess.

    • @bakermiaz
      @bakermiaz Před 18 dny

      I did the same thing and now I was just wondering how good or bad is the Corsair pre applied paste?

    • @sviktor4
      @sviktor4 Před 18 dny +2

      I hate Artic Silver with passion, I don't care about the performance if the paste uncleanable, there is a reason why builders like MX4.
      If you see that digusting stuff day to day and drips all over the GPU and motherboard when you remove the cooler you would hate too.

    • @NathanExplosion99
      @NathanExplosion99 Před 17 dny

      That's about what I saw when I decommissioned my old 2012-era PC with an i9-3770k CPU. Arctic Silver tube still in the motherboard box or I'd never have remembered what I used. Ran for 10 years vertical and no heat issues whatsoever using a decent (for the time) air cooler. And it was powered on pretty much 24/7 although spent at least 2/3 of that time asleep. I cleaned off the old paste two years ago when I cleaned everything up and gave it away to a friend for his kids to game on. I repasted with Noctua NT-H1 because that was what I had and I didn't trust the leftover tube of Arctic Silver.

    • @laurg5379
      @laurg5379 Před 17 dny +3

      I personally use Arctic Silver 5 in at least 10 desktop pc. In almost 30 years i have encounter not even a problem using AS5. Great cooling paste at a reasonable price. 😊

    • @Goatfer
      @Goatfer Před 17 dny +1

      Same here with Arctic Silver. Ran a i7-2600k OCd to 4.8 ghz for 11 years with an H100 aio. Was still wet when the computer got upgraded to an i7-13700k. Maybe a mess but cleaned up easily with paper towels and isopropyl.

  • @dennisperry8579
    @dennisperry8579 Před 18 dny +82

    Arctic Silver 5 isn't the easiest to spread, and doesn't have the top end thermals, but for an extremely long term build, it's been the most consistent. After 6 or 7 years on my last rig, it still wasn't dry, and had the exact same consistency as it when I first put it in.
    I always use it on a build that's not shooting for max performance and isn't going to see much maintenance.
    And Jay is 100% right. It's like a bad poop or anti-sieze to clean up 😂

    • @1300BlueStar
      @1300BlueStar Před 18 dny +1

      Get a cup of hot water and leave the tube in it for 5 or 8 minutes. As for length of use, I used AS-2 or 3 in 2007 on a Q6600 and it is still the same temps 17 years later.

    • @craazyy22
      @craazyy22 Před 18 dny +2

      I can attest to it durability. Had a HEDP gaming pc that built in 2013. in 2017 made it a NAS/gaming server running 24/7. Stripped the head of screw for the cooler. I used arctic silver 5 then. I didn't bother trying to change the paste ever since i knew it would be a hassle. But this year i decided to get rid of the system. Sold the parts used. When i took it off i was amazed that it still wasn't dry. After 11 years of use. Never had issues with thermals on it.
      However when i built my new system this year i tested arctic silver 5 vs mx-6. Let it run for 1 week before i checked the thermals. Arctic silver 5 was 4 degrees warmer. So went with MX-6. I will see in some years if i the thermals are still good.
      Still running silver 5 on all my server needs.

    • @vodaphonis
      @vodaphonis Před 18 dny

      I can confirm that. On my last two builds i used the Arctic Silver Paste. The older of the two is a AMD FX8350 , 8 Core / 8 Threads @4GHz with 64GB Ram and the paste is now 11 Years on the CPU and is still working absolutely fine with an Skythe Carma Cross II Aircooler. The Rig is used mainly for Video Editing and rendering and also Gaming once in a while. The Paste is still in top condition after all these years.

    • @Macabri_2k10
      @Macabri_2k10 Před 18 dny +1

      Arctic provides a cleaner, the reason it stays liquid over years is its silicone oil base carrier fluid, this is also what makes the cleaning a bit difficult. use an oil based cleaner first, theirs is most likely just orange oil based, at least it smells like it. after getting the thermal paste off with the oil based cleaner you can clean-up with alcohol as usual

    • @papodaca
      @papodaca Před 18 dny

      I bought a Tube of AS-5 in 2007 with my E6600 in 2007, I haven't had a CPU under a cooler as long as @1300BlueStar. I still have used that same tube for the 4 subsequent builds since 2007, its been the old reliable friend.

  • @awetisimgaming7473
    @awetisimgaming7473 Před 17 dny +3

    I end up with Noctua on accident a lot by getting their coolers for stuff, but if I've ever went out and deliberately bought paste because I was low or just wanted some stuff for stock, I'd always get Grizzly. I actually used liquid metal on my laptop, and it has to be almost 15 degrees cooler on that thing. I love supporting Der8auer as well, as like you said, he's a super enthusiast with his own personality, and his morality is some of the best I've ever seen in the industry.

  • @Blackrhyme7
    @Blackrhyme7 Před 18 dny +131

    Been using Arctic mx4 for years, might be a bit warmer than other ones, but can confirm it lasts for a quite a while after application.

    • @GregoryShtevensh
      @GregoryShtevensh Před 18 dny +9

      Never let me down. Got a tube when I installed my 2600 in early 2020, then used it again on my 5600x, then again on my 7800x3d and its given me good temps on all 3 chips. For the price it's just fine

    • @scdawn8658
      @scdawn8658 Před 18 dny +10

      Agreed, I have taken apart systems that have run for years on MX-4 and not a single one has dried out.

    • @blazerchris5444
      @blazerchris5444 Před 18 dny +4

      Yep, it's definitely pretty long lasting. And in the instance of my system, the cooling aspect wasn't important to me since it's on an r5 3600. I haven't touched the inside of my system since I built it in early 2020 and it's still running around the same temp as when I first pasted it.

    • @2112user
      @2112user Před 18 dny +1

      Same, The pc I'm typing this out on is 9 years or so old, still the original application and using a Noctua air cooler ( i7-6850K)

    • @mromutt
      @mromutt Před 18 dny +3

      @@Blackrhyme7 I am also extremely pleased with my MX-4, I'm using it on my evga 2070 and my and my 5600x. I originally got it after a lot of research and wanting a thicker paste but not super thick well also running cool. All my research pointed to this and it paid off.

  • @KevinLane8802
    @KevinLane8802 Před 18 dny +58

    Been using AS5 since the late 2000's, I haven't had any issues with it. It just works, that's all I care about.

    • @falkwulf3842
      @falkwulf3842 Před 18 dny +5

      I ran AS-5 exclusively from 2006 to 2024, but I couldnt get any AS-5 from the Egg when I put this rig together so I tried something different. Cooler Master Cryofuse Ultra-High Performance was the same price of 7.99 for a 2g tube. I dont know about longevity as I have just started using it but I do know my TEMPS are amazeballz on a 14700K. So if you ever want to try something new that might replace AS-5.

    • @MaaZeus
      @MaaZeus Před 18 dny +4

      It is an outdated TIM and you can get better performance without the conductivity downside elsewhere. Cheaper too. Good stuff but not worth the money in 2024.

    • @1300BlueStar
      @1300BlueStar Před 18 dny

      @@falkwulf3842 AS-5 came out 2012, you probably used AS-2 or 3 in 2006. Still good stuff, my Q6600 from 2007 is still on it's first pasting of AS-2 or 3 today.

    • @1300BlueStar
      @1300BlueStar Před 18 dny +7

      @@MaaZeus AS-5 is not conductive but it is capacitive and lasts forever without needing to be repasted. Almost all others need a repasting every few years but not AS so it is very cost effective. I've got a Q6600 that is still running today and I've never needed to repaste it in 17 years, mind you it's AS-2 or 3 but 17 years and it's still working like a few days after I first applied it. Oh and it was overclocked from 2.4GHz to 3.0GHz for the first 9 or 10 years.

    • @mephustowest1876
      @mephustowest1876 Před 18 dny

      I am in a similar situation as you, except I have been using arctic MX for years. I know its not the best but it has always worked well for me and lasts for a really long time.

  • @Spiralem
    @Spiralem Před 17 dny +2

    Would like to know how graphene pad compares to thermal paste as they technically last forever.

  • @Pykey687
    @Pykey687 Před 18 dny +43

    I have always used the Noctua NT-H1 Paste. I have found it long lasting and provides consistent results over multiple builds.

    • @johnlenerd
      @johnlenerd Před 18 dny +3

      Put it on a 3070 last nigth. Easy to apply. Last for years in my experience. Even better than what Noctua says regarding longevity.

    • @iLoveTheseRemoras
      @iLoveTheseRemoras Před 18 dny +2

      Vote for the NT-H1 from me too. It also works well for GPUs and PlayStation 4

    • @aonoloki
      @aonoloki Před 18 dny +2

      Same here, pretty surprised I had to scroll a bit to find it !
      Used the NT-H1 for quite a while, now I always go for the NT-H2 as its the upgrade and I beleive the H1 wasn't listed anymore the last time I buyed some. H2 seems to not squish out as far as the H1 is
      Quite a goopy one, that tend to squish out over the time but might be why it's not dry after a year or more (I do maintenance every year or so) so I never actually saw this paste completly dried out. Used both versions in custom builds, servers, consoles and even a phone repair for the NT-H2. Price could be better but I appreciate the alcohol wipes that come in the 10G pack, I always cary one in the tech bag, pretty handy

    • @steve_0712
      @steve_0712 Před 18 dny +1

      Same, kinda surprised he didn't include it as popular as it is.

    • @Ludak021
      @Ludak021 Před 18 dny +1

      It will dry out in a year and you will need to re-paste. Any MX is better in that regard.

  • @je5terc0re
    @je5terc0re Před 18 dny +165

    Thermal paste? Nah.
    Honeywell PTM7950? Of course.

    • @MikeHoltackers
      @MikeHoltackers Před 18 dny +6

      100%

    • @Keaton.
      @Keaton. Před 18 dny +9

      Do you mean, LTT PTM7950? lol

    • @linuxpirate
      @linuxpirate Před 18 dny +8

      @@Keaton. If only it were in stock right now... moddiy does have stock thankfully, which is who LTT recommended prior to them stocking it.

    • @astoraan6071
      @astoraan6071 Před 18 dny +13

      @@Keaton. Iv'e tried the cheapest ones I could find on Ali Express and they perform the same as the LTT one, only difference is that one time the Ali Express PTM 7950 came half squashed but it still worked in dropping Hot Spot temps for my 7800XT and 7900xtx. The ones from Ali Express are like £4 for 80x80x0.2mm sheet and it comes with free tools too

    • @v3xx3r
      @v3xx3r Před 18 dny +4

      I switched to ptm on my 7900xtx a week ago and have done a ton of burn ins with furmark and just playing games like cyberpunk and bl3. The improvement hasn't been as big as I hoped. I only dropped about 4° on my hotspot and 5° on my die temp. And there's still a 25° delta. I guess my limit wasn't the compound but the cooler itself.

  • @EinhanderSn0m4n
    @EinhanderSn0m4n Před 17 dny +3

    I used whatever Thermalright puts in the box with the PA120 I installed.

  • @davevan9150
    @davevan9150 Před 18 dny +9

    I still use the AS5, it lasts for years. You just have to apply it properly, spread an even layer just enough that you can't read the cpu markings. I have one that hasn't seen a temp increase for 10 years.

  • @Tech-Tempest
    @Tech-Tempest Před 18 dny +89

    I switched to PTM 7950 pads on my most recent build and I'm never going back to thermal paste! It was so easy and I'm getting better thermals.

    • @M0nsterRipper
      @M0nsterRipper Před 18 dny +4

      how much better? lets say compare to Mx-6 or similar.

    • @kh_trendy
      @kh_trendy Před 18 dny +1

      Can you reuse these pads? I've been thinking about purchasing a bunch and doing all my PCs in the house so I don't need to repaste them.

    • @eQui253
      @eQui253 Před 18 dny +1

      will give it a try with my next system... propably when AMD releases the X3D Zen5

    • @Jzwiz
      @Jzwiz Před 18 dny +10

      @@kh_trendyno its just a semi solid paste, once its on, its on. It melts and reforms but its like, on there. Also takes a few heat cycles to reach max performance

    • @Tech-Tempest
      @Tech-Tempest Před 18 dny +2

      ​@M0nsterRipper I used to use Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut with the spread thermal paste method and I got about a 7 deg avg difference when running Cinebench.

  • @Kobe4Life2424
    @Kobe4Life2424 Před 17 dny +4

    surprised to see Gelid GC Extreme isn't recommended. I've had that paste in a system built back in 2015 and the cpu temps on that system is exactly as it was on day 1. never repasted. never even took the cooler fans apart. just simple regular cleaning of blowing dust out.

    • @NoBS-xx5eq
      @NoBS-xx5eq Před 15 dny

      That's because this whole video is bullshit, he endorsed the german fuckboy, I've tried all of these religiously testing like a madman and GC was the lowest under stress and also at idle.
      I even tested with the noctua paste that comes with their coolers and even that one was better than Kryonaut.
      IT's just a massive marketing bullshit thing

    • @Revan-kq7ih
      @Revan-kq7ih Před 13 dny +1

      Same here. I had to use the reflow method 4 times on my old GTX 770 from 2020 till 2022 in order to avoid the GPU scalping that happened during that time. The card may have died once again but the temperatures never increased one bit.
      I used the last of the Gelid paste in 2021 on my 5900x / Noctua NH-D15 combo. No change in temperatures since then.
      Overall you can't go wrong with Gelid Solutions GC-Extreme.

  • @java1892
    @java1892 Před 18 dny +144

    Noctua NT-H2 ,always had Noctua coolers so i always use there paste

    • @kefka900
      @kefka900 Před 18 dny +23

      dang, i've been buying NT-H1 10g for $15, is there a difference from H1 vs H2? surprised Jay didn't include Noctua.

    • @JSmith-nu4bl
      @JSmith-nu4bl Před 18 dny +24

      Their

    • @lior2k
      @lior2k Před 18 dny

      berly 2c in my case ​@@kefka900

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 Před 18 dny +17

      @@JSmith-nu4bl Theiy're

    • @Drocinit247
      @Drocinit247 Před 18 dny +8

      They're it is! I knew their would be a grammar cop!!

  • @jucerz
    @jucerz Před 18 dny +15

    Recently switched to PTM7950, so much easier to apply and I am getting better thermals as well

    • @chris_007
      @chris_007 Před 18 dny

      What paste did you switch from

    • @Ryoyenata
      @Ryoyenata Před 17 dny +1

      Same for me, switched from the KPX and it improves my temps quite a bit

    • @jucerz
      @jucerz Před 14 dny

      @@chris_007 either hydronaut or aeronaut from Thermal Grizzly

  • @EbizPDX
    @EbizPDX Před 14 dny +1

    I've been using the Arctic Silver 5 for over a decade. I've never had heat issues and have never needed to re-apply. I would like to see you do a video on the new thermal pads that are purporting to be better than the paste.

  • @KristianNormand
    @KristianNormand Před 18 dny +36

    I would've loved to see Noctua's paste in this test. It's the one I've used for the last 10 years, but it would be awesome to see it compared to others.

    • @malphadour
      @malphadour Před 16 dny

      Every review I've seen of it puts it right in the bunch with mx-6, kryonaut and corsairs paste (which i forget the name of but is actually good) so definately a very decent paste.

    • @LatitudeSky
      @LatitudeSky Před 16 dny

      Used NT-H1 for years with good results. Also tried Kryonaut and did not see any real difference. NT-H1 has never given me an issue and it is cheaper. I get the giant tubes.

    • @lassebrustad
      @lassebrustad Před 16 dny

      cheaper than Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut, performs about the same, but then we're not supporting der8auer, so I might start using Thermal Grizzly for that reason alone, when my NT-H1 is empty, which might take a long time

  • @KastaRules
    @KastaRules Před 18 dny +12

    MY 2 Cents: I (accidentally) used a 21 Years Old Arctic Silver 3 syringe to bring back to life an old 2080 Ti which was thermal throttling real bad (Ambient temp inside the house is always about +32C/90F in summertime). I meant to use the newer Arctic Silver 5 but picked the wrong syringe from the lot and only realized it when it was too late. Long story short I was afraid I messed up but the card now, despite the high ambient temps and OLD AF paste, works even better than when it was brand new with higher clock speeds and lower temps. Quality paste really does make a difference and it has got a really long shelf life.

    • @ChzimpO
      @ChzimpO Před 18 dny +1

      That’s the best part of the AS line, lasts forever.

    • @aaronthomas6155
      @aaronthomas6155 Před 17 dny +1

      @@ChzimpO It doesn't last any longer than any other paste..... I've seen the pre-applied TIM on a stock Intel cooler go 15 years without thermal issues.

  • @ThatRavenGuyYT
    @ThatRavenGuyYT Před dnem +1

    I don't know if it's maybe not as common as I thought but I honestly expected to see Noctua's thermal paste in here

  • @_PITBOY
    @_PITBOY Před 18 dny +62

    “it's almost like a butt plug that just shoots out of there and then it craps all over your CPU like Taco Bell.”
    First, I wanna know why we are using a butt plug,
    and 2 ... I can die now. At least I'll die laughing.

    • @ilbro7874
      @ilbro7874 Před 18 dny +2

      Ok i got to watch now

    • @mannye
      @mannye Před 18 dny +2

      You need the buttplug to hold the tail in. How else are you gonna hold the tail?

    • @Drewkungfoo
      @Drewkungfoo Před 18 dny

      YES 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Drewkungfoo
      @Drewkungfoo Před 18 dny +1

      @@mannyea Belt 🤨😑😑😑

    • @mannye
      @mannye Před 17 dny

      @@Drewkungfoo Where is the fun in that?

  • @soverysleepy
    @soverysleepy Před 18 dny +28

    installed a thermalright peerless assassin 120 today, i just used the tube that came with it

    • @martinpro4967
      @martinpro4967 Před 18 dny +3

      This 😁 Thermal paste really does not matter much. Even without your cpu gets cooled (check out the video of Tech Illiterate), although not recommended. I just check what Noctua is saying about which method to use for which CPU and that's it. I am AM5 and the said pea, work perfectly. Not a fan of spreading it like Jay tbf.

    • @BiscuitBarrel179
      @BiscuitBarrel179 Před 18 dny +1

      My did an AM5 build last year and used the paste that came with the PA120SE and haven't seen any difference in temperature. I used the X pattern when applying and was probably over generous with it as there was a tiny little creep out of the sides when I tightened down the cooler.

    • @martinpro4967
      @martinpro4967 Před 17 dny +1

      @@BiscuitBarrel179 X pattern is also fine, just spreading it, is usually not recommended anymore, because you can have air bubble and with X or a pea, you press the air with the paste from the center out. Noctua always does great tests and gives their recommendations. But in the end it anyway does not matter much.

    • @ikwilgewoonfilmpje
      @ikwilgewoonfilmpje Před 13 dny +1

      To be fair almost all quality coolers come with brand thermal paste. Even if it's not labelled as such

  • @dj_paultuk7052
    @dj_paultuk7052 Před 7 dny +1

    Dell, HP, IBM / Lenovo certified Server hardware engineer here. All of these manufacturers teach you the same thing during training. Thermal paste is to be spread thinly across the entire CPU die using an old store card or similar spreader. The paste only needs to be Microns thick. There is no point putting it on thickly. Doing so can actually make matters worse and reduce conductivity. I personally have tested some Noctua H2 against some cheapo no name paste off ebay. And there was a big temp difference over a long time of high cpu load.

  • @scottfinlay2533
    @scottfinlay2533 Před 18 dny +34

    From Arctic Silver website: "Not Electrically Conductive:
    Arctic Silver 5 was formulated to conduct heat, not electricity.
    (While much safer than electrically conductive silver and copper greases, Arctic Silver 5 should be kept away from electrical traces, pins, and leads. While it is not electrically conductive, the compound is very slightly capacitive and could potentially cause problems if it bridges two close-proximity electrical paths.)"
    Also, I applied some AS5 2 weeks ago and it ran out of the tube fine. Was not hard to squeeze at all.

    • @GOGETAdu54
      @GOGETAdu54 Před 18 dny +7

      yeah his AS5 is really weird. Mine is like when I got it 10 years or some ago

    • @slmjm8849
      @slmjm8849 Před 18 dny

      Same here!

    • @AlexanderNecheff
      @AlexanderNecheff Před 18 dny +7

      If you want to get pedantic - by definition, capacitance is a form of conductivity since it reflects the ratio of charge transferred between two isolated conductors...the marketing department is taking some "creative liberties" with that one.
      But even if interpreted colloquially to mean "won't fry your components", no one wants to have to clean up bits of rogue thermal paste because there are electrical issues, no matter how non-permanent they are.
      Arctic Silver 5 was great back in the day but it is an average performer with some (minor) risks now.

    • @1300BlueStar
      @1300BlueStar Před 18 dny +1

      @@AlexanderNecheff Just apply a thin skim and you won't have a problem. If you get push out like Jay was showing you've used way way too much. Honestly I was cringing when Jay was spreading on that cpu, I'd say he had more then twice the paste that was needed.

    • @JimsRCandAuto
      @JimsRCandAuto Před 18 dny +2

      None of the times I used AS-5 was it hard to get out of the syringe. My first thought when Jay said that was he must have gotten an old tube of it.

  • @greentravels2850
    @greentravels2850 Před 18 dny +13

    @10:38 Well, that was a hell of a mental image I didn’t think would come along with talking about computers!

  • @joergbaute5423
    @joergbaute5423 Před 17 dny +2

    When you spent a lot ouf money on having a more fancy lighting in your PC spending a little more on paste will not kill you. I use Thermal Grizzly for years now. Never had any issues. I also ,like Jay said, apreciate the work of the company and R&D behind it.

    • @rslatara
      @rslatara Před 15 dny

      Yep, but there is a risk. They don't talk about that risk enough in their guides or manuals. Most don't need it.

  • @reikoshea
    @reikoshea Před 18 dny +47

    It's crazy, I've been building my own PCs since 2004, and I started using Arctic Silver back then, and I still use it today. I even have a tube sitting on my desk right now. Mine, my wifes, and my kids PC all have it, they're all on nearly 24x7, and I've never had an issue with a PC over heating out of the 3 dozen or so PCs I've built over the years. Glad to see it's at least competitive with other top brands. That said, I did buy a couple sheets of PTM7950, and my new builds ill be giving those a shot.

    • @Crecross
      @Crecross Před 18 dny +1

      Wow you have thermal paste sitting on your desk?! Me too 🤯🤯

    • @fetus2280
      @fetus2280 Před 18 dny +1

      Nice, Theres nothing wrong with it and it works just fine still. I use it on my main system, ive got a few systems with different Tp's on them and they will be checked/re-pasted very soon to see the results after 1-2-3 yr tests. I do it to see whats best for my systems and whats the best value, plus I like my own tests/data, trust but Verify, if you will. For example, how many Years will it last without drying right out and being useless. So far the only paste thats not been worth a cent is the Cheap chinese stuff. Its really oily and dries after 6-8 months. All my systems are 24/7 I should add. I see no real difference between Arctic, Gelid, Silver etc thus I dont see the need ( no sub zero here) to spend More money on Kp's brand or TG either. As for the PTM 7950 pads, theyre $30 bux per pad here and that stops me, that would get Very expensive to swap over. Ill stick to $10 purchase of the regular old paste thats done me well for the past 30 years. Cheers.

    • @ewenchan1239
      @ewenchan1239 Před 18 dny

      The problem with the PTM 7950 phase change thermal pad is that it is still subject to the pumping action due to thermal cycling.
      Unless you can either guarantee that you won't thermal cycle your CPU from min to max (and back), then the phase change thermal pads will be fine. But if your CPU will EVERY hit the max, and then bottom back out to minimal load, then you will have the pumping effect happen, which is the same issue with thermal paste.
      So it's either run your system upto moderate levels of load, or run it full tilt, 100%, all the time.

    • @bose301s
      @bose301s Před 18 dny +4

      ​@@ewenchan1239 PTM is not subject to pump out

    • @ewenchan1239
      @ewenchan1239 Před 18 dny +1

      @@bose301s
      "PTM is not subject to pump out"
      Yes, it is.
      Think about it -- it's PHASE CHANGE thermal pad.
      What to you think happens, when it changes PHASES?

  • @Souneed
    @Souneed Před 18 dny +6

    Would love to see the PTM7950 sheets tested and thermal grizzly sheets and all that stuff, also been reading about PTM 7958 SP as a very interesting option especially for my laptop, my desktop im sure is fine with whatever it doesnt struggle thermally at all since the gaming loads arent enough to push it to its limits

    • @JimsRCandAuto
      @JimsRCandAuto Před 18 dny +1

      I too would like to see a comparison of the thermal pads and see how they stack up to these thermal pastes.

  • @klacy5555
    @klacy5555 Před 10 dny +3

    I can't believe you used the phrase, " But Plug" in this video.

  • @Denominus
    @Denominus Před 18 dny +27

    Controversial, but I've run a much smaller experiment, and I concluded it doesn't really matter all that much what you use unless you are doing extreme overclocking. Between Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut and a tub of white thermal paste from Coolermaster, there was at most 3C difference. Given the one is a small tub of thermal paste, we are talking about a MASSIVE price difference for marginal improvement.

    • @svenhoff2653
      @svenhoff2653 Před 18 dny +3

      Yup! The most difference is in long time stability. You can really see when a paste is using 30%+ silicone. Good paste (long time stable) is usually using 55-65% Aluminiumoxid, 15-20% zink, and rest silicone paste. Paste like this is usually a bit more viscous because it contains so much solid particles. And this is what makes the paste also long time stable

    • @papasmurf5598
      @papasmurf5598 Před 17 dny

      How about the Paste that cracks and dries up over a short period of time. That’s the main point he’s talking about here to me. I don’t want to constantly have to reapply my past. Pain in the butt and I had a bad experience one time remounting the AIO. I tightened down the 4 screws to the mounting bracket too hard apparently and the CPU was not running correctly afterwards and tried everything before taking the AIO off and inspecting the Pins. Sure enough I had smashed 2 pins in the lower right hand corner. I was able to use a needle to bend them back up into position luckily and remounted everything and it worked fine. The KingPin paste he’s talking about will not dry up or crack so I want something like that. That CPU was a 14900KS very expensive and it’s running like a champ today.

    • @svenhoff2653
      @svenhoff2653 Před 17 dny +1

      @@papasmurf5598 The paste only dries out if they use cheap silicone oil. If it is cheap the vapor preasure is to high. Best is silicone oil that is used or example in Diffusion pumps. It does have a so low vapor preassure that it does not dry out (even under vakuum). There are a bunch of pastes that are doing fine in this regard. The Apex, Thermal Grizzly is making a new paste right now that will focus on long time stability, Thermalright TF8, Apex or simply go with the Thermal Grizzly kryosheet (this will 100% not dry out because it is not a paste. It is made out of carbon nanotubes).

    • @papasmurf5598
      @papasmurf5598 Před 17 dny

      @svenhoff2653 Thanks for that Info. I do use Thermal Grizzly and it has been great.

    • @Teasuti
      @Teasuti Před 17 dny

      I guess it depends on the purpose.
      We know that CPU blocks don't vary in performance that much either, but the price can be ludicrous and differs wildly between them. But let's say if you're investing into the AlphaCool Core 1 because it has dethroned pretty much everything else by about the same margin we have here between the MX4 and the Thermal Grizzly - and you're willing to throw cash at it -, then I guess you won't cheap out on the thermal paste either to lose the marginal gain the better block brings on the table, will you?
      Or if 3°C doesn't matter, then I guess a budget build would do the job just fine too. Heck, even water cooling isn't necessary.

  • @ChaitanyaShukla2503
    @ChaitanyaShukla2503 Před 18 dny +6

    Arctic Silver needed 50hrs of curing via multiple heatcycles to perform at its best(according to datasheet) and that curing time was the reason why it fell out of fashion. These days I either use Noctua NT-H2 or Arctic MX-4 for thermal paste and for low maintenance systems graphene thermal pads that are available on market.
    Edit: Checked again and curing time is 200hrs for Silver 5 not 50hrs.

    • @AC-cg4be
      @AC-cg4be Před 18 dny +2

      Yeah, you have to let it cure for a while. It's an "apply and forget" thing, not an "apply and see immediate results."
      I use it on long-term builds where I'm just mounting a cooler and never going to touch it for the next 5 years. Even after 5 years it'll still be tacky and malleable.

    • @malphadour
      @malphadour Před 16 dny +1

      I remember the days of installing with AS5, doing benchtests - and then coming back 5 days later and and everything benched 2c cooler after it cured :)

  • @niltons.santana
    @niltons.santana Před 17 dny +3

    You have tested good thermal pastes. What do you think about testing a thermal paste produced in Brazil? Implastec is the only Brazilian manufacturer to produce high-performance thermal pastes. If you are interested, Implastec can send the TS COLD for you to test, free of charge.

  • @406Steven
    @406Steven Před 18 dny +4

    I've been using AS5 since the ThermalRight XP-90 on my Athlon 64 and it's been a solid performer for decades. It's shocking to see how well it holds up against modern compounds, I was expecting something else to have come out by now to do noticeably better.

  • @KevinGoldLVL
    @KevinGoldLVL Před 18 dny +7

    Been using mx4 with i9, i7 & ryzen with AIO or Tower cooler and never had any issues, it's a great product at a great price and it last a long time too!

  • @pandalife_gaming
    @pandalife_gaming Před 16 dny +2

    Just to be clear, you can get much better prices on Thermal Grizzly and KPX if you buy larger quantities. About $3 a gram if you buy 10g

  • @J_Bwn
    @J_Bwn Před 18 dny +133

    MX-4 all the way so far for me.

    • @MobiusGT
      @MobiusGT Před 18 dny +10

      even after MX-6 came out?

    • @Falita
      @Falita Před 18 dny +33

      @@MobiusGT In my experience the mx6 dries out very quickly and is a pain to remove, mx4 last for many years, easy to remove, works fine and also taste good.

    • @TriPBOOMER
      @TriPBOOMER Před 18 dny +1

      @@MobiusGT MX-6 is my backup if I'm out of Kryonaught its decent paste

    • @mindofmyown333
      @mindofmyown333 Před 18 dny +10

      @@MobiusGTlove the MX-6. Even though it’s the same car as the Ford Probe, I like the design and interior a bit more…..oh you meant the paste….sorry

    • @MobiusGT
      @MobiusGT Před 18 dny +5

      @@Falita flavor is pretty important, have you tasted the japanese apple flavored thermal paste yet?

  • @Pandemonium088
    @Pandemonium088 Před 18 dny +35

    Tldw: doesnt matter 1-2c difference.

    • @timhartherz5652
      @timhartherz5652 Před 18 dny +2

      Unless you buy the cheapest stuff which comes in a bucket, it makes no practical difference in my experience, as far as initial temps go.
      It all comes down to whenever it is electrical conductive, how easy it is to apply and how long it lasts before it dries out.

    • @mrbobgamingmemes9558
      @mrbobgamingmemes9558 Před 18 dny +1

      In laptop or handheld device thermal paste matter a lot though,

    • @Pandemonium088
      @Pandemonium088 Před 18 dny

      @@mrbobgamingmemes9558 We must be looking at two differenr video, as this is not about hand helds.

    • @mrbobgamingmemes9558
      @mrbobgamingmemes9558 Před 18 dny

      @@Pandemonium088 yeah, just want to warm people that this is not the same scenario as on laptop,

  • @dragonborn.k
    @dragonborn.k Před 16 dny +1

    I just want to mention a few things on price per gram (if you need a lot of paste).
    MX-4 is available in a 45g tube for $25, and 20g for $14.
    My default paste, MX-6, is only up to 8g for $11.
    KPX is 10g for $30, and 30g for $56.
    There are also some 10g Noctua pastes that are decently priced.
    Though this is probably only useful to me because I have a few devices, and monke brain is activated by the better value of larger tubes.

  • @Pray4TheBatman
    @Pray4TheBatman Před 18 dny +5

    I've had good results from mx-4 and noctua's nt-h1. Both have lasted years in my systems without having to re-apply the paste. I'm currently using nt-h2 and that does tend to spread easier. I've been using that for several months without issues. Get whichever is cheaper.

    • @Lurch-Bot
      @Lurch-Bot Před 13 dny

      H1 is cheaper than H2. Also performs better than MX-4 and lasts longer. MX4 is one of the cheapest name brand pastes on the market. You generally get what you pay for. 20g of MX-4 is $2 cheaper than 10g of H1. But MX-4 is fine for most people. I like to OC so I get the Noctua NT-H1. But I don't have any high end hardware so it is pointless to spend more than that.
      For that matter, TF-4 is even cheaper than MX-4 if you are just getting a small tube and performs about the same.

  • @NeoEletto24
    @NeoEletto24 Před 18 dny +6

    Just FYI,the 4090 on the back is showing Jay it's gratitude by spinning the fans 7:37 😂

    • @MegaMerijn
      @MegaMerijn Před 17 dny +1

      Lmao I just saw this and was about to comment, the ghosts of EVGA GPU's are haunting jay

  • @Sniffy1975
    @Sniffy1975 Před 17 dny

    As someone that still has some AS5 in my drawer.. I've never had the viscosity issue you described with getting it out of the tube... definitely possible that they have changed the formula over the last few years, but I found that interesting.

  • @johnnykay4738
    @johnnykay4738 Před 18 dny +4

    Kingpin KPX has been my go to for years.

  • @ewleverard
    @ewleverard Před 18 dny +26

    Wished there are graphene thermal pads in this.

    • @C-M-E
      @C-M-E Před 18 dny +3

      How would you know if there were? True graphene is invisible to the naked eye at One Atom Thick. KryoSheets are graphite, regardless of what the marketing says. Source: I make true graphene by the quart for industry, and it requires liquid suspension or direct substrate bonding via CVD, spectrography study and a TEM to find out how well the batch came out after a week of effort.

  • @vertigo1055
    @vertigo1055 Před 17 dny +1

    I've been using the Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut for 3 builds in the last 6 years and each time I pull the cooler off it is never dried out. I finally finished of my 3 gram tube and that's even after having to replace 2 coolers on the current system. 1 of coolers had the stud broke with just finger tightening the thumb nut (I am 5'4" 135, not body building material). The second had the AIO pump fail (Arctic Cooling liquid freezer II 360mm, replacement was going to take too long to wait but it's still coming and will be a Back-up). I also repasted once after 2 years on the 1st system I used it on (It was soft, like butter?,but not dried). I used to be an Arctic Silver MX-4 fan (It's not a horrible paste and on the site it mentions it's a side by side to MX-5 & not a replacement). I wholey trust and will continue using Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut until something else is as affordable and performant for 3 grams plus spreader (the 3 gram kit is not expensive). I have no doubt KPX is also something I would enjoy. End Point, spending a few dollars more for piece of mind that I've done everything I can to protect the thermal state of the CPU is WORTH $20 (which I pay less for the 3 gram kit). Cheers! Stay Healthy and Stay Sane!

  • @brianfisher7385
    @brianfisher7385 Před 18 dny +10

    Bro, scraping the turtle head had me rolling... 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @leenunya2965
      @leenunya2965 Před 18 dny +3

      First time in a while I laughed that hard at a tech video joke 😂

  • @itsdeonlol
    @itsdeonlol Před 18 dny +4

    I just use whatever I have on hand! I still like Arctic Silver though!

  • @smmmokin
    @smmmokin Před 16 dny

    It's strange this video hasn't happened before from those I follow. Thanks man. I'm actually curious to see the results.

  • @AbsolutTalent1
    @AbsolutTalent1 Před 18 dny +10

    your arctic silver 5 was a bad tube. I still use it and none of the tubes are hard to spread or have to be heated.

    • @dslynx
      @dslynx Před 18 dny +1

      Or, he just needs to hit the gym. I've never had issues either.

    • @johnt.848
      @johnt.848 Před 18 dny +2

      Absolutely, it does have a shelf life and hardens in the tube.

  • @iamionscat9035
    @iamionscat9035 Před 18 dny +11

    Viscosity. The term you are searching for is - viscosity.
    "The state of being thick, sticky, and semifluid in consistency, due to internal friction."
    "cooling the fluid raises its viscosity"

    • @Balrog132
      @Balrog132 Před 17 dny +2

      Yeah it's actually the opposite of what he said. Viscosity is a stupid term and somehow counter-intuitive being the amount of non-fluidity :D

    • @yensteel
      @yensteel Před 17 dny

      @@Balrog132 Yeah, that confuses people so much when people discuss it. High viscosity means it's jelly like, low is water like. Viscous fluid means hard to deform too. Don't confuse with vicious. :p

  • @TylerMcX19
    @TylerMcX19 Před 17 dny +2

    Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut, because any high temperature I can,cross it off the the list when troubleshooting. (Was Msi mystic lighting 10% cpu high cpu temperature)

  • @BigBig5
    @BigBig5 Před 18 dny +14

    I used to use Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut, but it lost its thermal conductivity over time. Now I use Arctic MX-6.

    • @4epa1012
      @4epa1012 Před 18 dny

      Same here

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Před 18 dny +2

      How long did it take for that to happen? All I use is kryonaut and I have 2 systems that I put it on CPU/GPU that I built 4 years ago for my workshop and they are giving the exact same temps as when they were built...Plus I have it on both the systems in my house...Kyronaut does dry up a bit after a year or two, but I have never noticed a difference in temps because of it...

    • @YOEL_44
      @YOEL_44 Před 18 dny +4

      ​@@brucepreston3927 Same.
      My computer was built during April 2020, so 4 years.
      It gets used almost every day, usually for gaming, image editing or light 3D modeling.
      Temps are rock solid and with no variance other than when the room itself heat soaks (it's small and the window opens the other way around)

    • @chris_007
      @chris_007 Před 18 dny

      Went from TM30 (only thing at Best Buy) to MX-6 and the difference was noticeable

    • @First-Name_Last-Name
      @First-Name_Last-Name Před 18 dny

      Same. But I'm planning to go back to normal Kryonaut since it seems my CPU rans a bit hotter (3-5 C higher) with the MX-6.
      I used Kryonaut Extreme and it does not even last a year before degrading and having slightly worse performance than Kryonaut. Dunno why though.

  • @VarriskKhanaar
    @VarriskKhanaar Před 18 dny +18

    I almost felt bad laughing at this silly notion that this would be funny as a lube conversation.. until Jay drops the poop/buttplug comparison..

  • @MusashiOf5Rings
    @MusashiOf5Rings Před 2 dny

    One thing Roman (Der8auer) noted in an interview is the cost difference between the Thermal Grizzly pastes (Kryonaut isn't the only TG paste) is that the more expensive ones get more machine time to grind the particles of the primary interface material smaller and smaller. The smaller the particles, the better the thermal transfer. Also, TG pastes are manufactured in Germany, which is why those prices are so high.

  • @talondarkheart1946
    @talondarkheart1946 Před 17 dny +4

    Absolutely love JTC! What a breath of fresh air from what the other guy became. JTC Keeps people enthusiastic about PC's and Building PC's where as the other guy just wants to sell you pillows and underwear. Thank You Jayztwocents for making cents of all these technologies.

    • @fpbbq
      @fpbbq Před 17 dny +1

      how else will he afford his mansion with heated concrete floors and a water cooled server room using his pool?

    • @TheIrishAlchemist205
      @TheIrishAlchemist205 Před 16 dny +4

      ​@@fpbbqOh, we ARE talking about that guy. Heh.

  • @mattio79
    @mattio79 Před 18 dny +9

    Kryosheet and nothing else, period.

    • @n3rdg4m3r
      @n3rdg4m3r Před 18 dny +2

      I was hoping that would have been included in the comparison

  • @raduavram
    @raduavram Před 17 dny

    My dad asked me to repaste his laptop and mentioned to get some silver based thermal paste, i already have a tube of mx4 and this video shows me that old school wins, but the risk of a short in a laptop die especially since it's surrounded by all those little resistors worries me quite a lot, so it's great that the max delta between them is just 3 degrees and ease of cleaning after the paste had it's course means a lot, thank you for mentioning that caveat of arctic silver in the video :)

    • @ianhaylock7409
      @ianhaylock7409 Před 17 dny

      You could cover the resistors with a coat of clear nail varnish before using conductive pastes.

  • @FNAF_Funtime_Freddy
    @FNAF_Funtime_Freddy Před 18 dny +5

    I pretty much use Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme on everything

    • @1967KID
      @1967KID Před 18 dny +3

      Pads on all my 5 computers. Performance and low temps.

    • @DasWandbild
      @DasWandbild Před 18 dny +2

      I just wish TG put more than juuuust barely enough for one application in a tube.
      I cracked open a fresh tube of KPX today, and it felt like I could have made it rain thermal paste. In a good way.

    • @dennisperry8579
      @dennisperry8579 Před 18 dny

      ​@@DasWandbild no doubt... My wallet cried because I had to get enough to repaste my GPU and enough for the Threadripper build I'm upgrading to before the end of the year 😂
      Would've hurt less if I had bought it afterwards 😂

  • @michiganjack1337
    @michiganjack1337 Před 18 dny +17

    Short Answer: Yes.
    Long Answer: It depends.

  • @tistats
    @tistats Před 4 dny +1

    I have always used Noctua NT-H2 with great results. It's my go to.

  • @chincemagnet
    @chincemagnet Před 18 dny +5

    Jay, this is a good time to remind noobs that Liquid Metal is not something the average person should be using. I always cringe when I see people talking about how they applied liquid metal and now their laptop won’t turn on or their motherboard won’t post, or their GPU isn’t detected.

  • @frijin490
    @frijin490 Před 18 dny +6

    PTM7950 > Thermal paste.

  • @mustangj0hn
    @mustangj0hn Před 17 dny +2

    Recently changed from Arctic MX4 to a Thermal Grizzly Carbon Nano pad. Very impressed with the pad, thermals are great on R7 5800x with Coolermaster 360 AIO.

    • @oekulof
      @oekulof Před 9 dny +1

      are those pads good? they are quite expensive and i´m not sure if they worth the price

    • @mustangj0hn
      @mustangj0hn Před 8 dny

      @@oekulof Yes, very good thermals and reusable.

  • @steveozone4910
    @steveozone4910 Před 17 dny +4

    Semen works well.

  • @khaychi
    @khaychi Před 17 dny +1

    Been using MX3,4,5 for the past 15 years. Always using the "icing the cake" method. Never had any bad experience and the price was okay.
    What would be funny is a thermal paste test with either these tiny samples you get when you buy a new cooler, or with pre applied paste. Basically thermal paste that isn't sold anywhere online, and is exclusive to new coolers and AiOs. Still have a ton of these 1gram samples floating around, and always wondered, if they are any good. 🤔🤔

  • @laminatedsamurai
    @laminatedsamurai Před 16 dny

    Mx4 has always been my go-to for all my builds. It's been rock solid in every box I've built, the price is right, and it usually lasts long enough that I'm either upgrading my CPU or building a whole new box before having to replace it.

  • @ToxicAntidote
    @ToxicAntidote Před 17 dny +2

    I'm using Noctua NT-H1. It's been great for both CPU's and GPU's.
    One thing I would like to see a video of is the performance of whatever thermal paste that comes pre-applied on GPU's.
    I think it's one of the things most PC builders don't really think too much about, since it's not something you notice when putting together a build.
    It wasn't until a couple of years ago I finally thought of opening up my previous graphics card to find out the thermal paste had mostly dried. After replacing it with NT-H1 the temperatures went down significantly.

    • @PileOfEmptyTapes
      @PileOfEmptyTapes Před 16 dny +1

      Preapplied thermal paste can vary wildly. Whatever Fujitsu used under an iQ45 heatsink (ca. 2009) basically was still good 15 years later, if a bear to clean up (like chewing gum). The stuff on a hot-running SAS2208 RAID controller (D3116) was dried out, rock-hard and crumbling away after 6-7 years of nonstop operation. (Replaced with MX-4 a year ago, temps have been slightly better than new since.) There are also some first-gen Ryzen boards that are notorious for hot-running VRMs, turns out much the same was happening under their heatsinks - I guess they used cheap preapplied pad-printed paste instead of the common silicone pads.

  • @amcdonald7479
    @amcdonald7479 Před 17 dny +1

    Just used hydronaut again for a 2nd time and still stand by it. It was still thick on my last CPU after 2-3 years of constant usage and my temps from week 1 to the last week remained the same.

  • @zephrizi9034
    @zephrizi9034 Před 17 dny +1

    I just use either whatever comes with the heat sink or the bulk white stuff I bought from one of the tech stores years ago. By the time it drys out the pc will probably be outdated anyways.

  • @cmdr_talikarni
    @cmdr_talikarni Před 16 dny

    I remember doing some testing for a company 10+ years ago that was this "diamond dust infused", and it was amazing, 5-8C drops on CPUs that would otherwise run quite hot with all the mainstream brand thermal pastes. I ran one for several years with that stuff. Then came time to remove the heatsink and it was essentially fused to the CPU. Took some goo gone and high % isopropyl alcohol to finally cut through. Since then Arctic MX-4 has always been my go to, it consistently works well.

  • @ginnai
    @ginnai Před 17 dny

    My 955 BE, OC-ed to 3.2ghz, was done 13 years ago with Artic Silver and temps have been stable for over a decade. That said, it was known to conduct... but with intentful application, I never had a problem.
    In my new build, I did use Thermal and have been totally happy with it. Protecting my $400 CPU easily justifies the spend - I almost went with Thermal's sheets, but it was a little too exotic.

  • @Marc.Google
    @Marc.Google Před 5 dny

    Also, Igor’s Lab published an excellent article on pasting methods and he proclaimed the sausage method down the centre as the most consistently reliable application method.

  • @urbanws1234
    @urbanws1234 Před 2 dny +1

    Artic silver 5 is great. Never had an issue. Even use it on the Shop Computers and never a heat issue to be had. Conductivity is nulled by using caution. Oldest is 9+ years.

  • @RealAlphaDrum
    @RealAlphaDrum Před 17 dny

    I had a 1700 socket pin crisis (2 bent pins) today, and was within the 15 day return window at MicroCenter, so I got a replacement board and also bought a tiny tube of Grizzly for my 12900k. My first go 'round with paste was getting my CPU up to 100c which is of course, not very good. With the Grizzly and better application and coverage, my stress tests are topping out around 80c. So, thanks for your videos.

  • @Zarathustra-H-
    @Zarathustra-H- Před 11 dny

    My take has always been that yes, some pastes are better than others, but the paste-to-paste difference is relatively small, especially compared to the mount-to-mount variability.
    Getting a proper mount is much more important.
    The icing method usually winds up with an excessive amount of paste. I usually pre-warm the tube and use a gloved hand and spread it with my fingertip which results in a much thinner layer.
    Also, it's amusing to still see Arctic Silver 5 on the list. That stuff was great 15-20 years ago, but - without having gotten to the results section yet, I can't imagine it actually keeps up today.
    For the last several years I've been using the Kryonaut or Kryonaut extreme in my "overkill" water loops. It's a little thick when it first come sout of the tube, so heating it is definitely worthwhile, but once properly applied I find it lasts for several years without noticibly degrading.
    My understanding is that the "Kryonaut Extreme" is not necessarily "better" across the board, but that it is better optimized for conductivity at lower temperatures, like one might see with more extreme cooling methods (or at the very least overkill water loops) so it's better to choose the right one for your application. Regular Kryonaut of rair or regular water-cooling and Kryonaut Extreme for extreme cooling or very beefy water loops. I have used Extreme on my GPU's for the last 3 years, and have been very happy with it. The CPU gets regular Kryonaut, and it works well.

  • @ryanhamstra49
    @ryanhamstra49 Před 10 dny +1

    I would have liked to see the 7590 that LTT has been hawking. Their testing showed it worked as good or better than Liquid Metal, but 3rd party testing would be nice. Haven’t seen anyone else that I watch test it.

  • @kniteprince3798
    @kniteprince3798 Před 11 dny

    I currently have 4 Gaming rigs running with Arctic Silver 5, because... it was a top recommendation when I built the PC's.. the oldest TWO are just over 6 years old, the youngest is two and a half years old. About to build a PC for traveling between homes, instead of trying to pack up my main gaming rig all the time, and will be using the same tube, since I bought a 12 gram tube of the Arctic Silver 5 way back when.... The first had an AIO, but it died swiftly, the pump quit, and I have replaced it with a Noctua NH-D15... (Or similar.) Since then I have been staying away from the water, and have yet to have any issues with the Arctic Silver 5 on any of the gaming rigs. I am not trying to promote it, Just saying, thats what I got/bought and have been using with no problems so far! Keep up the good work!

  • @BrockGrimes
    @BrockGrimes Před 17 dny +2

    17:40 Ok thermal paste it use to fill in imperfections between the cpu and cooler. We apply the thinnest we can get away with to fill this void.....That is why people lose their shit when people glob the shit on. Pastes like artic silver work very very well and have been since like 2000, when applied properly. This isn't sandwich filling, it's imperfection fixing. Less is better, you're not wasting money, and you're not creating a mess to clean up later. Also my goto is Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme, I use it on my CPU and GPU.....yes it's a pain in the dick to spread on thin. Works the best and clean up is a swab and alcohol.

  • @coltonarendt
    @coltonarendt Před 17 dny

    I would like an expansion of this to look at the new sheets, liquid metal, and any other styles to show the trade offs

  • @madhatter5475
    @madhatter5475 Před 17 dny

    The better way is to put thermal paste over all the surface. Put a little on the center as you say could make some corners without thermal. I agree. ❤

  • @Hoigwai
    @Hoigwai Před 16 dny

    I use MX4. It does the work and as you said has a very high longevity so I can feel confident about it not needing re-application very often.

  • @DiceAir
    @DiceAir Před 17 dny

    my go to thermal paste is either what is included or something that doesn't have the "pump out" issue over time