GPU Cleaning Before & After Thermals: Re-Pasting & Dust Removal

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
  • We're cleaning and re-pasting several GPUs, including one that's 11 years old. With GPU shortages, we wanted to help people keep current cards running longer. Includes temperature benchmarks.
    Sponsor: Get 10% off Squarespace purchases (geni.us/BqEpf)
    Grab the GamersNexus tear-down toolkit! Supports most video cards on the market and gives you high-quality, long-lasting tools: store.gamersnexus.net/product...
    Learn about common warning signs of a bad used GPU: • Warning Signs When Buy...
    Video cards featured in this piece include the GTX 760, GTX 970, GTX 1080 Ti (fairly new), and HD 5750 (which is ancient). They are in varying states of disrepair. This idea was inspired by one of our viewers, who emailed a few months ago to suggest that we do a preventative maintenance video to illustrate the practical means of maintaining a video card in a market which is devoid of new products. This content includes before & after benchmarks for new thermal paste application and dust cleaning, and those are done across multiple video cards in varying states of disrepair to help demonstrate the reality of cleaning. It's not always going to make things better thermally, but doing preventative maintenance helps, as the name suggests, prevent future damage in the event a problem is unknown. Hopefully this provides some inspiration to do some cleaning of your own!
    Like our content? Please consider becoming our Patron to support us: / gamersnexus
    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 - Preventative Maintenance
    03:00 - Taking Apart Many GPUs of Varying Ages
    14:17 - Cleaning Video Cards
    16:58 - Thermals: GTX 760 & GTX 970
    19:01 - Thermals: AMD HD5750
    19:59 - Thermals: GTX 1080 Ti
    21:07 - Conclusion
    ** Please like, comment, and subscribe for more! **
    Links to Amazon and Newegg are typically monetized on our channel (affiliate links) and may return a commission of sales to us from the retailer. This is unrelated to the product manufacturer. Any advertisements or sponsorships are disclosed within the video ("this video is brought to you by") and above the fold in the description. We do not ever produce paid content or "sponsored content" (meaning that the content is our idea and is not funded externally aside from whatever ad placement is in the beginning) and we do not ever charge manufacturers for coverage.
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    Host, Testing: Steve Burke
    Video: Andrew Coleman, Keegan Gallick
    Additional QC: Ryan Greenberg
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Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +274

    Thanks to viewer Aaron (& others) for the video request on this one. Took us a while to get around to it, but really wanted to emphasize the before/after thermals and we had to collect some older cards! Watch our Best Cases of 2021 (So Far) list: czcams.com/video/ffuAnwGivO8/video.html
    Learn about common warning signs of a bad used GPU: czcams.com/video/J2VkkEHDG5E/video.html
    Grab the GamersNexus tear-down toolkit! Supports most video cards on the market and gives you high-quality, long-lasting tools: store.gamersnexus.net/products/gamersnexus-tear-down-toolkit

    • @IceBlue2012
      @IceBlue2012 Před 3 lety +3

      Awesome video! Thanks for all the hard work on the content. GN is my reference for high quality reviews.
      I do a lot of these cleanings myself refurbishing and flipping old PCs and parts. The worst one I came across so far I called "smoky smoke". It was completely covered with a brown layer of nicotine resin mixed with dust. You can probably imagine the smell...
      However, I'm still always a bit concerned about thermal pads though... 0.75mm is almost impossible to find. Is it OK to replace it with 0.5mm? And how much difference there is between an ARCTIC one versus the cheap stuff on Amazon that advertises 6W/mK? When you have to replace a large volume of them, cost becomes a concern especially if you only do it in your (limited) spare time.
      Would it be possible to make a content piece about thermal pads? Like proper replacement, characteristics (specific gravity?), and differences in quality, pressure, and thickness?
      Thanks so much again. And greetings from a Brazilian living in Canada 😉

    • @benfinke8595
      @benfinke8595 Před 3 lety +1

      Definitely want to say I appreciate all the work, too. Such a go to for know how. But what y'all got for the absolute gremlins? What shorts first typically in a video card? Even if there's nothing to be done just knowing would ease the pain lol.

    • @TechyBen
      @TechyBen Před 3 lety +1

      Those EVGA cards you show, seems EVGA have had a nice consistent build quality for a good few years. :)
      [Edit] I wonder if the unused heat spreader was just from a holdover from the other cards? So standardised parts, and only fitting thermal pads to the cards that need them?

    • @AB-dx1co
      @AB-dx1co Před 3 lety +4

      Can you replace paste with liquid metal and compare temperature

    • @GeoffRichards_GP
      @GeoffRichards_GP Před 3 lety +2

      Ant specific paste recommendations or just use whatever you have for CPU? ie Arctic Silver etc?
      I heard of some total disasters using Liquid Metal but not sure if that was just user error or no recommended for GPU (and would it be less likely to "dry out" over time?)

  • @BrokenNoah
    @BrokenNoah Před 3 lety +2175

    Dust bunnies in my case have already evolved into an actual bunny society and are now entering the renaissance era

    • @TechyBen
      @TechyBen Před 3 lety +150

      Sounds good, in those kind of timescales they should soon progress to industrial, technology, and then hit the singularity before Autumn. So you'll get a free PC upgrade for a few days, then they will take over the planet...

    • @pietrmuffei8874
      @pietrmuffei8874 Před 3 lety +4

      A friendly reminder to rewatch the first season of Solar Opposites before the second season gets released on March 26

    • @TomasPiliponis
      @TomasPiliponis Před 3 lety +34

      All nice and well for now. But do watch out for a bunny with funny stache above upper lip in next few hundred years from now.

    • @starr0401
      @starr0401 Před 3 lety +6

      Sounds like they have started to generate some great artists or shit like that

    • @OnlyKaerius
      @OnlyKaerius Před 3 lety +4

      I open up the case a couple of times a year and vaccuum inside. Whiny fans can be fixed with a wet wipe and a thin tool like a screwdriver, to clean the blades, haven't needed to do that with my rig(8 years since built, 5 since GPU upgrade), possibly due to the semi-regular vaccuming, but I've done it with my mom's laptop.

  • @xwaltranx
    @xwaltranx Před 3 lety +703

    Linus is crying after he saw Steve can carry 4 cards at once

    • @amicloud_yt
      @amicloud_yt Před 3 lety +94

      ah yes he can carry 4 cards at once, but can he *_drop_* 4 cards at once?

    • @sawii1482
      @sawii1482 Před 3 lety +8

      huh linus also can do that. but i wouldn't suggest he do that😂

    • @writehse
      @writehse Před 3 lety +11

      Linus will drop all of them lmao

    • @poopy9172
      @poopy9172 Před 3 lety +3

      Laughs in Raja Koduri

    • @deezybe9489
      @deezybe9489 Před 3 lety +12

      @@writehse no he will drop all 5 of them.....where the 5th came from nobody knows LOL

  • @oliverrugg3732
    @oliverrugg3732 Před 3 lety +194

    I bought a blower style RX 480 a year or so back, for like £40, advertised as "not working". I took it apart, and this thing had so much dust in it, when I put it in the sink the heatsink was practically *watertight* on top of that, the thermal paste was crumbling off in chunks. Once I sorted it out, it went from running 70°C idle to 30°C.

    • @kingkosher6231
      @kingkosher6231 Před 2 lety +9

      just yesterday got a 1070 TI with the same issue, founders edition style cooler and the paste was old "for parts" for 100 bucks I said screw it and after my 1080 died on me I couldn't pass it up, beats my 770 lol

    • @notsure6834
      @notsure6834 Před rokem +6

      I bought a 2080 Ti for $100 which they said shut down after intensive load. I found out that it was just heavily covered in dust, so I cleaned it and there are no issues as of right now.

    • @ZERARCHIVE2023
      @ZERARCHIVE2023 Před rokem +1

      @@notsure6834 IG most people doesn't even try to clean their PC

  • @RubianGamer
    @RubianGamer Před 3 lety +377

    "taking the thing apart completely can extend its life span"
    proceeds to pull all the capacitors and chips off of the board for cleaning

    • @morrokbyo
      @morrokbyo Před 3 lety +65

      It'll live forever now.

    • @kcocgibkcusuoy
      @kcocgibkcusuoy Před 3 lety +27

      @@morrokbyo it's name was Robert Paulsen.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +160

      NO!

    • @33gles
      @33gles Před 3 lety +64

      @@GamersNexus That's the next trend, replacing the 'stock' solder with high conductive solder.

    • @ultisready9452
      @ultisready9452 Před 3 lety +26

      @@33gles by thermal grizzy

  • @SonGoku-97
    @SonGoku-97 Před 3 lety +557

    I may just be easily impressed or whatever but that F1 design looked pretty cool

    • @artisan002
      @artisan002 Před 3 lety +38

      There's a bed frame like that too. You could make it a theme!

    • @SonGoku-97
      @SonGoku-97 Před 3 lety +34

      @@artisan002 some Hot-Wheels pajamas and lightning McQueen slippers to match?

    • @sawii1482
      @sawii1482 Před 3 lety +2

      @@SonGoku-97 could make a trend out of that😂

    • @artisan002
      @artisan002 Před 3 lety +8

      @@SonGoku-97 Speed Racer poster on the ceiling. LOL

    • @Poolboy001
      @Poolboy001 Před 3 lety +13

      Part of me misses the days of gimmicky PC parts.

  • @ryandickerson7915
    @ryandickerson7915 Před 3 lety +322

    Its always so interesting to see how odd older cards can look especially as even with AIB cards they all still have similar designs now.

    • @444ranger444
      @444ranger444 Před 3 lety +8

      New ones look weird as well ngl

    • @sawii1482
      @sawii1482 Před 3 lety

      what is aib?

    • @whitehavencpu6813
      @whitehavencpu6813 Před 3 lety +7

      Sapphire Toxic 6900XT looks epic af

    • @whitehavencpu6813
      @whitehavencpu6813 Před 3 lety +8

      @@sawii1482 Add in Board

    • @shaneeslick
      @shaneeslick Před 3 lety +3

      well you can blame all the reviewers that whinge about them if they are not Colour Neutral or all designed to the same theme so you can have a Gigabyte Motherboard & ASUS or MSI GPU match, Even to the point of now telling nVIDIA Don't have your Green Logo Green & AMD Don't have your Red Logo Red, So now all Partner Motherboards & GPUs look the same & they want AMD, nVIDIA & probably Intel when they finally release their GPU to all look the same as well
      If they are whinging theme is so Important then why are they not even using the same brand for Motherboard & GPU, Contradictory Morons,
      I wanted a Theme so have MSI Gaming+ Motherboard & GPU with RED LEDs & Red Fans

  • @notgonnapay
    @notgonnapay Před 3 lety +77

    If you still want to soak the dust in your GPU heatsink, but don’t feel comfortable using water, you can use 90% isopropyl/ethyl alcohol. The alcohol won’t conduct electricity nearly as well as water and it obviously evaporates much faster.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 Před 2 lety +1

      I would use QD Electronics Cleaner because it will dry faster than the water. Just use it in a well ventilated space.

    • @dangerd9315
      @dangerd9315 Před rokem

      heatsink is just piece of metal lmaojust let it dry long enough

    • @w0udo6yv4o4
      @w0udo6yv4o4 Před rokem +6

      @@dangerd9315 Water with salts in it can cause corrosion. Especially to bare copper

    • @tamago5765
      @tamago5765 Před rokem +6

      @@w0udo6yv4o4 So just use distiled

  • @alistairblaire6001
    @alistairblaire6001 Před 3 lety +31

    It's kind of amazing how thermal paste can age. I had thermal issues with an old, original Xbox. It would consistently shut down in the middle of a game. I took it apart and the thermal paste was like old gum. Actually fairly difficult to remove. I did the work and I haven't had issues with it since.

    • @Battledongus
      @Battledongus Před rokem +1

      That must have been cool took a broken thing little bit of maintenance runs great again!

    • @EnhancedNightmare
      @EnhancedNightmare Před rokem +1

      After changing my laptop paste to thermal grizzly i had 20c drop in temps. If I didn't do it myself I would not believe.

  • @joker927
    @joker927 Před 3 lety +170

    The question behind this video is perfect. The results are unexpected and thus makes this video top tier GN content.

    • @Erilan5
      @Erilan5 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx no

    • @Erilan5
      @Erilan5 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ginxxxxx The amount of gpus they have is nothing compared to the total market. It literally doesn't make any difference for availability. And I want at least the reviewers to have cards so I know if I should bother trying to get one. It's just a perk of being a reviewer.

    • @Erilan5
      @Erilan5 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx What else should they do? Call for a riot? 😂

    • @mowglycdb
      @mowglycdb Před 3 lety

      @@ginxxxxx you didn't even answer @Erilans question :P

    • @Erilan5
      @Erilan5 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx I only hear frustration and hate. Don't know where it's coming from, but the best of luck to you

  • @Turboman_64
    @Turboman_64 Před 3 lety +125

    The thermal pad thickness is exactly the reason why i have always been too scared to take any card apart. I simply have no clue what thermal pads to get for any of my cards and i cannot find any information online.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +87

      Fortunately, you can always use calipers to measure it! It would mean a bit of a delay while you measure and order pads, though.

    • @Turboman_64
      @Turboman_64 Před 3 lety +6

      @@GamersNexus True, thanks for the tip :)

    • @joefowble
      @joefowble Před 3 lety +23

      My limited experience is that close is usually good enough. A few 100x100 pads of 1 and 2 mm thickness off ebay and you'll likely be ok for most cards, but techpowerup teardown photos are great for a glance at what is under the heatsink before you actually commit to a teardown.

    • @alreed2434
      @alreed2434 Před 3 lety +7

      They do sell varying thickness pads in kits on amazon and ebay. Just look for the higher efficiency pads. Can't remember the term at the moment sorry.

    • @fracturedlife1393
      @fracturedlife1393 Před 3 lety +7

      There are some kits provide a few different heights on amazon, very handy. Eyeballing it can sometimes work

  • @crashbandicoot5636
    @crashbandicoot5636 Před 3 lety +40

    Let's go, another deep dive on these kinds of stuff is always a hit. First it was the thermal paste, then the chairs, now the GPU maintenance!

    • @crashbandicoot5636
      @crashbandicoot5636 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx you do know they buy a lot of their cards on their own right? E.g. Titan RTX

    • @tycho7006
      @tycho7006 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx I’m not sure how a review channel purchasing and/or reviewing GPUs is “causing the crisis.” I’m pretty sure the main issues are: scalpers, miners, the downtime in production from the pandemic, very high demand, mfg. queues and an overall silicon shortage…
      Reviewers like GN are important for us to know which cards are worth our time or not, versus day LTT which seems to have lately taken the stance of “buy anything and everything if you can”
      How would they even have prevented the “crisis”? That’s not their job and the cause is far beyond one channel lol.

    • @tycho7006
      @tycho7006 Před 2 lety

      @@ginxxxxx No, lol

    • @tycho7006
      @tycho7006 Před 2 lety

      @@ginxxxxx I’m a scammer? What are you on about? Either you’re a child or you need professional help, and either way you clearly don’t know what you’re talking about lol.

  • @RedGrizz
    @RedGrizz Před 3 lety +17

    This was a really good video and a reminder to maintain the tech that a user has probably invested a lot of money into over the years. I really appreciate the pro-reuse/recycling message.

  • @combatwombat594
    @combatwombat594 Před 3 lety +285

    I mean you guys wanna talk about needing more unique parts these days, I'd take a GPU that looked like an F1 car man lmao

    • @martinivanov1319
      @martinivanov1319 Před 3 lety +13

      true. i remember gpus from 10-15 years ago having very unique designs and always pictures and stuff on the card itself and the boxes

    • @crisnmaryfam7344
      @crisnmaryfam7344 Před 3 lety +7

      @@martinivanov1319 cases also rarely had windows or glass, the new market is "clean" aesthetic and cartoon images and such dont fit well in that mold. I agree though I would love to see more unique designs. We can do without printed stickers though.

    • @martinivanov1319
      @martinivanov1319 Před 3 lety +5

      @@crisnmaryfam7344 wtf do u mean cartoon images? its images of game characters and other stuff or just some abstract design

    • @CameronHeathman
      @CameronHeathman Před 3 lety +2

      It'll go super well with my car bed. No judging.

    • @Doozy95
      @Doozy95 Před 3 lety +7

      @@martinivanov1319 yeah keep those cartoons off those gpus that are used to play cartoons!

  • @JustinAlexanderBell
    @JustinAlexanderBell Před 3 lety +154

    My 680 Classified went from 80C to 45C after swapping old dried out paste at 100% fan speed and load.

    • @testtest8798
      @testtest8798 Před 3 lety +1

      Very nice!!!

    • @Allyouknow5820
      @Allyouknow5820 Před 3 lety

      Nice !

    • @GalateaToha
      @GalateaToha Před 3 lety +1

      That’s hot

    • @tigerheaddude
      @tigerheaddude Před 3 lety

      @@GalateaToha lol

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 3 lety +1

      I have GTX 690. For the most it just idles as a GPU in a office machine. About as close to silent as can be. It is silent if it is not used for gaming. vs a GTX 1050? Well it is paid for.
      It also will game better. If necessary.
      It does run two monitors easily. Well it does have two GPUs
      I think the GTX 680 will also do just fine for anther 10 years as a office GPU . 680 & 690 are good for 4K. Both can also can run Two 2560 x1440 60hz monitors.
      But for gaming?
      Maybe not made for gaming at 4K?
      The old R 5 1600 and the gtx 690 spends most of the time just running at idle.
      For office use not much reason to overclock either CPU or GPU.
      But the 3800X system? That gets hammered.

  • @hellofyou
    @hellofyou Před 3 lety +19

    i've now seen so many squarespace ads that i'm never ever gonna even remotely consider them.

  • @liamfitzpatrick3849
    @liamfitzpatrick3849 Před 3 lety +11

    Now THIS is content! Such a great response from GN to listen to their viewers for video ideas. Cleaning, although sometimes frustrating or even functionally a waste of time, is still nonetheless one of the most satisfying things to do. Kind of makes me want to hijack my brother’s computer for a day just so I can clean it out for him.

  • @ValkyrieTiara
    @ValkyrieTiara Před 3 lety +84

    6:23 "If you wanna buy a tool kit..."
    Me: "IFIXIIIIIIIIIIT!!!....wait wrong channel..."

  • @therevanchist1123
    @therevanchist1123 Před 3 lety +80

    EVGA: “Would you like a GPU with those thermal pads?”

    • @matasa7463
      @matasa7463 Před 3 lety +4

      Better that than the new Gigabyte 3080 cards, with no thermal pads on the back to connect the PCB to the backplate...

    • @CheapBastard1988
      @CheapBastard1988 Před 3 lety +4

      They had a problem with not enough thermal pads being applied shortly before release of the 1080Ti FTW3. EVGA handled the situation very well but they probably wanted to avoid another incident. Besides the FTW3 is a very over built card in general. It only really gets close to its limit with a hardware mod and sub ambient cooling.

  • @BitterHSweetA
    @BitterHSweetA Před 3 lety +7

    Did this with an old laptop. Temps went from throttling to actually boosting and the fans not ramping up anymore! A must do to bring to life any old pc or laptop!

  • @pjlinch
    @pjlinch Před 3 lety +84

    After stacking the cards I immediately thought Steve was gonna pull a Linus and drop the gpus

  • @Pressbutan
    @Pressbutan Před 3 lety +260

    Jesus. I must be an obsessive, I clean my towers and components for dust every other month.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +123

      That's good practice!

    • @cbabbx
      @cbabbx Před 3 lety +21

      With four dogs, every month for me. No fun toting a 40lb tower to the garage to use the air compressor. 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @juanbrits3002
      @juanbrits3002 Před 3 lety +5

      I bought a Bosch GBL 800 E blower and use that, it makes things sooo much easier and quicker than how I used to clean it for many years (manual cleaning)

    • @LiveType
      @LiveType Před 3 lety +45

      Fun fact, I used to do this every roughly 3-4 months just like you and would always get a nice satisfying cloud of dust and the interior would always have a "restorative" feel to it afterward. Thermals also saw a noticeable improvement. I then moved to a place with a fancy active air filtration system and zero carpet. I think it's been about 2 years since I opened the thing up. When I do open it up I expect it to still be very clean. Last time I did, I wiped my finger on a horizontal surface and it didn't leave a trail. Still took the whole thing apart and cleaned it as I couldn't believe it. I mean it does have filters but those were also pretty clean.
      Moral of the story: if possible live in a clean environment. Dramatically cuts down on so many maintenance issues overall, not just computer related.

    • @deadmeat6563
      @deadmeat6563 Před 3 lety +3

      Once a month with a compressor and every year a strip down clean. My new build is in a Lian Li Lancool 2 so more dust now, so this might get revised.

  • @simepaul4882
    @simepaul4882 Před 3 lety

    Amazing video, thanks for always listening to your viewers. Much love!!!

  • @ModeKi1997
    @ModeKi1997 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Steve! This has been very informative! I would love to see a similar video showing benchmarks before and after a re-seat and re-paste of a CPU that is 5-10 years old.

  • @Keade66
    @Keade66 Před 3 lety +7

    Thank you to all from GN for making this - I have been waiting for a properly tested experiment like this for a long time! I have been super curious about the actual difference it makes, but I have never had the patience to test it properly myself 🙃

  • @LCTRgames
    @LCTRgames Před 3 lety +282

    Careful carrying those, probably worth $20k in today's market or something...

    • @aaz1992
      @aaz1992 Před 3 lety +11

      Lol 69k

    • @gamamew
      @gamamew Před 3 lety +3

      Hahaha like pilling up 1kg pure gold bars

    • @threecats8219
      @threecats8219 Před 3 lety +1

      1080 Ti buy-it-now £600.

    • @johnthetechguy5607
      @johnthetechguy5607 Před 3 lety +2

      Dang man gpu’s extremely rare I bet that one is worth like 6 figures haven’t seen those since the great age of 2020

    • @SparkY0
      @SparkY0 Před 3 lety +2

      GTX 1080 is still a decent enough value for the time being

  • @BeardyBaldyBob
    @BeardyBaldyBob Před 3 lety +9

    7:03 if I'd been doing a clean at home and heard that noise as I disassembled it, I'd probably have been convinced I'd managed to break it and burst into tears lol

    • @ryanm2628
      @ryanm2628 Před 2 lety +3

      Everyone knows the first rule of PC building: just pull/push harder

  • @ssjwes
    @ssjwes Před 2 lety +1

    I didn't think I was going to watch this whole video but it was a lot more interesting and entertaining then what I expected.

  • @insanity-vr6vu
    @insanity-vr6vu Před 3 lety +28

    I cleaned my friends 1060 a few months ago, temps went from mid 70’s to mid 60’s. Not sure how performance was effected but thermals were certainly better.

    • @insanity-vr6vu
      @insanity-vr6vu Před 3 lety +1

      @asdrubale bisanzio I certainly agree I’m just not sure it had any effect as the 1060 in question is quite power limited by design

    • @Piterixos
      @Piterixos Před 3 lety +1

      10 degrees should translate to some 30MHz higher boost.

    • @insanity-vr6vu
      @insanity-vr6vu Před 3 lety +1

      @@Piterixos yeah I’m pretty sure you’re right, not that 30mhz makes any meaningful difference though

  • @georgf9279
    @georgf9279 Před 3 lety +153

    Steve: Doesn't really want to recommend we put the bare metal heatsink under running water.
    Roman: Put's the board in the dishwasher.

    • @JirayD
      @JirayD Před 3 lety +5

      Dishwashers in Germany use deionized water, so that actually is safe.

    • @nothing-dy6vh
      @nothing-dy6vh Před 3 lety +23

      @@JirayD What kind of dishwasher do you have? The water in the usual dishwasher is far from being deionized. You actually add salt in order to lower water hardness.

    • @broken1965
      @broken1965 Před 3 lety +9

      Spray heatsinks with brake cleaner then rinse done

    • @broken1965
      @broken1965 Před 3 lety

      @@JirayD you don't need di water thats like in a closed water systems an acid batteries

    • @Syraxal
      @Syraxal Před 3 lety +8

      @@broken1965 Yes! because plastic loves the heavy solvent that is brake cleaner...
      (F.Y.I For the Love of God, DON'T DO THIS)

  • @NitrousXProductions
    @NitrousXProductions Před 3 lety +2

    Great video as always, I myself purchased a 2nd hand GTX 1070 Zotac AMP. Managed to get a great deal on it before the prices on used parts sky rocketed. When I received it, it was dusty and had cracked thermal paste on the GPU Die. I did test it before taking it apart though. After cleaning it I did not see much difference in performance/thermals but the Fan noise is alot quieter so it goes to show that doing regular maintenance on your parts work.

  • @diskgrind3410
    @diskgrind3410 Před 3 lety

    I really like your videos, Trustable information, low key and professionally presented! Please keep up the great work and keep the videos coming.

  • @georgem.6136
    @georgem.6136 Před 3 lety +69

    GTX 760, wow, antique!

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 3 lety +39

      Not as old as the HD 5750!

    • @Sparkmovement
      @Sparkmovement Před 3 lety +8

      @@GamersNexus still have my xfx 5770's I had in crossfire. come to think of it they had a double lifetime warranty..... hrmmm. lol

    • @srk63
      @srk63 Před 3 lety +5

      i still have mine the asus gtx 760, absolutely working fine

    • @Turboman_64
      @Turboman_64 Před 3 lety +6

      Babys.... my XFX 8800 GTX is sitting in my Gigabyte GTX 1080 Ti Aorus Xtreme edition box next to me.

    • @skipee4589
      @skipee4589 Před 3 lety

      @@GamersNexus i have two of those 😅

  • @Teksers
    @Teksers Před 3 lety +11

    More videos like this should be made to inform people on how they can extend the life of their components. Good job Steve and keep up the good work. Does anyone here know of any site that can tell me/us how thick the thermal pads need to be for certain models. Trying to get this information from vendor is very tedious and most times you don't even get a reply.

  • @sumikomei
    @sumikomei Před 3 lety

    I genuinely appreciate the amount of volume normalization care that went into the hand drier part. Those specific units in particular are absolutely *deafening* in person, I wish I could normalize it like that for when I have to use one...

  • @alphanimal
    @alphanimal Před 3 lety +8

    I found when you rinse stuff with tap water, it helps to rinse again with a bit of distilled water. Small droplets that evaporate off the surface will leave some residue of minerals etc. in tap water. Distilled water evaporates clean.

    • @OmniMontel
      @OmniMontel Před 2 lety +1

      Animal I really have to wonder about how much mineral deposit you get in a couple of minutes of tap water. I am not knocking the rerinsing idea at all because I have often times noticed my cleaning liquid picks up a lot of dust and such and the small drops will leave a thin residue that a second wipe gets but for most tap water in the civilized world it takes years of use and regular wetting drying cycles to get noticable build up from dissolved minerals. There are some outliers and I know of a well that is safe to drink under consumption standards that lays down rust colored stains in months and another that has really heavy calcium from limestone. The limestone one still takes years in a kettle to build a noticeable film.
      I am just thinking that your residue is more likely due to dirt residue from the cleaning and/or you need to check your water/plumbing because that's a lot of suspended junk in your water.

    • @alphanimal
      @alphanimal Před 2 lety

      @@OmniMontel The rinsing itself is not a problem I think. I was only concerned about the residue that's left when the droplets evaporate off the surface, aka when you let it dry. We have relatively mineral-rich water here, mostly limestone I think. I did an experiment once where I put a drop of tap water and a drop of distilled water on a clean glass surface and waited until both were evaporated. I could clearly see the residue from the tap water on the glass surface (if you look at it under a bright light with a dark background and no reflected light). I couldn't see anything where the distilled water was. I also did some tests with other liquids (lens cleaning solution, rubbing alcohol...) everything left a residue except distilled water.

    • @OmniMontel
      @OmniMontel Před 2 lety

      @@alphanimal lens cleaning solution eh yeah definitely depending on the solution (some are actually designed to leave antifogging films and other stuff like that), amazed on the rubbing alcohol, distilled water is supposed to be evaporated then condensed water so no surprise, have had distilled water that had picked up a lot of crap from the jug a few times but that was an issue with the container and keeping it in a vechile long term. Like I said with your tap water I would get it checked, it's not supposed to have that much crap dissolved in it. If it's constantly leaving a residue on your drinking glasses and such then it's weird and you should find out what it is.
      If you do get it tested and it's not ridiculous like over 150mg/L of normal stuff like calcium or magnesium then eh whatever, you've got hard water in your area. For something like washing a heatsink not a big deal if it's other stuff like say Thallium.

    • @alphanimal
      @alphanimal Před 2 lety

      @@OmniMontel Sorry I'm not sure if the stuff I tested classifies as rubbing alcohol, so I might be wrong there. It was Ethanol but I don't know what purity. The tap water is fine, it's just hard water.

  • @wb5872
    @wb5872 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you so much for this! I own a GTX 760 and it’s been having a ton of heating problems recently, and I’m going to try to dust it off soon!

  • @Ironclad17
    @Ironclad17 Před 3 lety +5

    Good on you Steve! I also encourage people to look into deshrouding. First part of a gpu that wears down is the fans and while you can buy replacements on ali or ebay, you might have decent 120 mm fans lying around. Some zip ties and a 3/4-pin to mini-gpu adapter and you've got better thermals for cheap.

  • @StitchJones
    @StitchJones Před 3 lety +2

    The toolkit is amazing! So glad I got one.

  • @LuizFernando-ym1my
    @LuizFernando-ym1my Před 3 lety +1

    Just love this kind of videos on a lazy Sunday taking some beers.

  • @isbath
    @isbath Před 3 lety +12

    my room is so bad for dust that i clean it and it becomes the same state a week later

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd Před 3 lety +4

    As someone who prefers to buy moderately high-end, and run the crap out of the hardware for years, I appreciate videos like this. Hopefully the current silicon shortage will help others to appreciate videos like this. I would love to see a resurgence in repair and maintenance interest -- not quite a "lost art" yet, but definitely more niche than I think it should be. Thanks!

    •  Před rokem +1

      As someone who "prefers" to buy moderately low-end, and run the crap out of the hardware for years…
      But I heartily agree with your general sentiments.

  • @MrMcGreed
    @MrMcGreed Před 3 lety

    I've recently taken apart, cleaned, repasted and put new pads on my GTX 1080ti Aorus Extreme. It dropped from 83c to 78c on average after 30 mins. of fiery ball of GPU-death test (furmark). It's been approx. 20 months since the last cleaning, and first time changing the pads. - was happy to see that.
    Have been putting together PC's for a couple of years now, to sell on local used market - normally it's not a big change, but it's always nice to be able to lower the dba when showing it to customers. Worst-best I've seen was a MSI GTX 980 I changed the paste on and cleaned, got it from 94c to 81c inside a case with good airflow and 4 120mm fans. That was a noticable change, but then again, I think the fanblades was twice as heavy as stock, just from all the dust on them!
    As always, thanks for the great content - good idea with this vid, would love to see you "test" a full system before and after in the same way.

  • @tissot233
    @tissot233 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for editor adding that 7:03. That sounded straight like a stock glass breaking sound.

  • @mauticom
    @mauticom Před 3 lety +3

    Independly from this video I cleaned my MSI Gaming 1080ti and replaced the Thermalpaste with Kryonaut and GPU temps have been lowered by 8-10 degrees C and hot spot temps are up to 15 degrees lower. Amazing results for 15mins work. Also the default paste was applied very roughly and was also on the surrounding GPU frame, the silver one as seen in 20:04, that prevented optimal pressure from the cooler.

  • @TheEuropeanFox
    @TheEuropeanFox Před 3 lety +6

    First GPU you took the heatsink off, that was exactly my experience lmao. Took me about half an hour to clean the old paste off.

  • @sayhellotovin
    @sayhellotovin Před 3 lety +1

    Did this to an ol' Zotac 970 Mini last year which had regular usage since new, it wasn't that bad with dust as it was in a filtered case in a clean environment but cleaning out a few small clumps of dust and repasting took it from throttling at 85 deg C to topping out at ~73 deg C whilst overclocked and hitting higher clock speeds. Worth doing.

  • @kyleshelton1636
    @kyleshelton1636 Před 2 lety +1

    I just cleaned and re-pasted my strix 1080ti. Fantastic card, and a noticeable improvement in thermals just from an easy cleaning and new paste.

  • @BootyYeeter
    @BootyYeeter Před 3 lety +6

    Your dedication to providing thorough and consistent content is why I love you guys. Yall set the standard that every other Tech CZcamsr should be living up to.

  • @aqulex84
    @aqulex84 Před 3 lety +48

    When will you release that cat test site 😂😂🙀🙀 our two furrballs would really love to see some standardized box test for quality and stuff.

  • @123Suffering456
    @123Suffering456 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you, helpful video. My 2-year-old 2080 became unusually hot to over 80°C when it used to have just around 65°C max. Opened it up, no dust issues but the thermal paste didn't look good. Now with new thermal paste applied I'm back at 64°C again.

  • @01RIE01
    @01RIE01 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey, I sitll have one of those HD5750's lying around after I upgraded to a GTX 1050. What a design, I love it.

  • @jackscully7986
    @jackscully7986 Před 3 lety +4

    This inspired me to take apart my 960 and 1080, replace the paste, run the heatsinks under water, and put them back together. It was very satisfying when they still worked lol

  • @BigBoyBen83
    @BigBoyBen83 Před 3 lety +4

    This was a great idea, I'm still running a 1060 6GB, so I might do this myself.

  • @SunderMecha
    @SunderMecha Před 3 lety

    Good content yet again, thank you!

  • @chadsuniverse
    @chadsuniverse Před 2 lety

    I have a GTX 760. I most likely need to get my hands on proper tools. So glad to see there's a POTENTIAL for much more improved thermals after cleaning and repasting. THANKS!

  • @bootscatsbootscatsboots
    @bootscatsbootscatsboots Před 3 lety +6

    *Steve showing a clip applying thermal paste*... That’s a bold move, Cotton. Let’s check the comments.

  • @OliverJanoschek
    @OliverJanoschek Před 3 lety +7

    After watching I've been curious how mine would look like after 3 years, so I checked my Asus Strix 1080Ti's thermal paste application; to my horror not even 20% were covered with thermal paste and what was applied was completely caked, brittle and dry. I re-applied with paste I had available and that dropped my temperatures a whopping 18°C in idle and around 15°C full load... also it's now half as loud.

    • @cartrips9263
      @cartrips9263 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, some manufacturers don't apply well. I had a EVGA here once that crashed from time to time. Sent it in and they said it's fine and just returned it to me. I then took the cooler apart and saw that 2 of the VRMs didn't have any pads on them. Put some on them and it never crashed again.

  • @MagicMono10
    @MagicMono10 Před 3 lety +1

    I've already re-pasted my rx480 a year ago. Really imporved the temps to when it was brand new.

  • @donh8833
    @donh8833 Před 3 lety +1

    A big thank you for this video.
    A lot of people are afraid to disassemble their gpu's because of what they cost. So hopefully this will give them the courage to do so.

  • @derptyderp5287
    @derptyderp5287 Před 3 lety +6

    The airflow on that Formula One racing card must be great! Would actually be interested to see if they could design a GPU to make good use of the direct case airflow instead of just blowing it around the case.

  • @stevemadak6255
    @stevemadak6255 Před 3 lety +5

    3/4" paint brushes found at craft stores are great for dust removal. You can dab at the dust and also use a vacuum (mine has the hose that pulls out) to take it up. The brush will get into the sink fins nicely

  • @whattf3924
    @whattf3924 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome to see this days after I cleaned and repasted my 1060, lil trooper idles at 28degrees 💪

  • @Fractal_blip
    @Fractal_blip Před 3 lety

    I can tell this video is gonna be a banger. I love these older cards. And seeing them dug into is nice lol.

  • @newworldforward1842
    @newworldforward1842 Před 3 lety +4

    "Better airflow for my immune system" -Love that airflow!

  • @Menthix
    @Menthix Před 3 lety +8

    One takeaway: get a case with good, easy to clean dust filters.

  • @fremenondesand3896
    @fremenondesand3896 Před 9 měsíci

    I wanted to thank you for doing this guide.
    Bought some 1mm and 0.5mm thermal pads, then some decent thermal paste.
    Heatsink on my 2070 super (which was made in 2019, according to GPU-Z) made a horrible snapping noise when I pulled it off. Paste was dry as a bone.
    Cut the 0.5mm pads to size, 1mm wasn't necessary, and I was able to salvage the thick pads on the VRM's and caps.
    All the screws went onto a magnet so they didn't get eaten by the carpet bugs.

  • @SchnitzelDaemon
    @SchnitzelDaemon Před 3 lety +1

    I did this on my 980 reference and I had a similar 12 degree drop. Did it on an Asus 970 and got a modest 5 degree drop. Thanks for the great info, I will definitely be doing this again.

  • @grumpywolfgaming
    @grumpywolfgaming Před 3 lety +7

    I'm shocked that evga 1080ti still works. I literally had 3 of those die on me. After the last RMA I just sold it.

  • @ceejay2k2
    @ceejay2k2 Před 3 lety +13

    this is strangely therapeutic watching someone taking old videocards apart

  • @WhoLover
    @WhoLover Před 2 lety +1

    That squarespace ad is great, 10/10

  • @horstigallllable
    @horstigallllable Před 3 lety

    Just repasted and cleaned my R9 270X. It runs now 11 °C colder on Furmark alone and it is more stable when doing light OC.
    Love your Videos Steve, keep up the Great work!

  • @mewimi
    @mewimi Před 3 lety +3

    You should be extremely careful with taking a heatsink off of a GPU/CPU that doesn't have an IHS. The reason for this, is because you could actually shatter the silicon upon removal. You should use a heatgun on a low setting ( with the fan assembly removed! ) or run the GPU beforehand to soften the thermal paste. For chips that have an IHS, I'd still recommend softening the paste first, as a precaution.

  • @TheChodax
    @TheChodax Před 3 lety +3

    I'd be interested in a look at 1080ti card performance on release drivers vs on the latest drivers. Just to see what if any uplift has been gained by driver maturity.

  • @michaelfinlayson5650
    @michaelfinlayson5650 Před 3 lety +1

    Been slowly working through my old cards that had never been taken apart. HD 7970 6GB went from 97+ to 68 degrees at 100% fans and load with Furmark. Took a while with so many thermal pads but worth it.

  • @tonyc1956
    @tonyc1956 Před 3 lety

    What a coincidence! I just performed this procedure on my old trusty GTX970SSC less than a week ago. I sold it to a buddy in 2019 and he used it heavily in a very dusty room until he upgraded last summer. Traded a 1440p monitor to him for it and a Logi G27 wheel set. It was caked in brown dust (he smokes) which meant I went thru ALOT of Q-tips and rubbing alcohol to get the grime off. Kudos to EVGA as I was impressed with the build of the card and the thermal pads were in perfect condition. Fresh MX4 and she's up and running 68C @ 1450 core / 7500 mem Folding at Home in my HTPC which feeds a 60" plasma 1080p TV so it'll suffice for any gaming duties there. As soon as prices get more real it'll probably be bumped out with the trickle-down effect but until then resurrection is necessary. Good piece for the uninitiated GN, and welcome instead of reviews of unavailable hardware.

  • @TillOverHill
    @TillOverHill Před 3 lety +8

    Hey Steve, the recent uprise in temperatures - I presume - drove a replacement in some cards for the thermal pads with silicone based, possibly curing (?) thermal putty. My 3080 is one such application and since it is not a thermal material I had worked before, and particularly after seeing the prices of thermal putty tubes; I've been wondering; would it be possible to replace these with, say, high performing thermal pads instead? For easier maintenance in the future particularly. Even the most expensive pads are cheaper (and also reusable) than generic putty.
    Or are thermal putty reusable and I am misinformed? There hasn't been much coverage on these from what I have seen.

    • @shaneeslick
      @shaneeslick Před 3 lety +2

      I have been wondering about this too, does the putty dry? if you put the GPU back together without changing the putty can this cause a gap in the putty causing Overheating?

    • @TillOverHill
      @TillOverHill Před 3 lety +5

      @@shaneeslick From what I found on some spec sheets online; high quality putty offers virtually no aging (1), but there are also many variations inclusive of (1, in form of pads) and (2,3) in form of industrial tube for applications, as well as this (3, one quick visual example of it I could find for application) tub like distribution. I do not know what type and for what purpose has been selected for these recent applications, seemingly with GDDR6x memories, to replace traditional thermal pads. (3) offers some insight to this but it is a very short video without a follow-up. Hence why I thought this would be a great next step to cover these - novel to me - applications as well as providing further insight after the present maintenance guide by GN.
      1: www.fujipoly.com/usa/products/sarcon-thermal-management-components/thermal-gap-filler-products/gap-filler-pads-putty/
      2: lipolytim.com/thermal-products/s-putty-thermal-conductive-putty-series/
      3: czcams.com/video/Rt42_QIKkAQ/video.html

    • @shaneeslick
      @shaneeslick Před 3 lety +2

      @@TillOverHill thanks for the info it is a big help understanding,
      I was thinking it was more like Thermal Paste where you just wipe it off & throw it away, if it is Non-Drying so you can remove it then combine it all together to reuse it that is really good for less waste,
      I guess like a Thermal Pad you just need to be a bit patient with your effort in getting it off the components if you want to reuse but the chances of actually destroying the Putty during the Teardown are gone

  • @kevadu
    @kevadu Před 3 lety +3

    I'd be really curious if the effects of the dust cleaning and repasting could somehow be tested independently. Of course I realize that's kind of hard to do since you need to remove the heatsinks to clean them on most of these and if you were to not replace old dry paste after removing the heatsink that's not really a fair comparison. Dry past can still be thermally conductive but it's *not* going to be able to find its way into the exact position it was in before when you reseat the heatsink.
    I guess you'd have to do everything you can to clean the heatsink without actually removing it for the test to even work. But in the cases where there was significant improvement I'm really curious how much of that was due to just the dust buildup.

  • @mkusanagi
    @mkusanagi Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome content as always. I might add that surprisingly my open air P3 accumulates less dust than my NZXT, Phantex and Thermaltake ATX cases

  • @77perudo
    @77perudo Před 3 lety +1

    For removing thermal paste I always use ronsonal lighter fluid. Works great. I found out that trick about 25 years ago and have been using it since. Have used that literally 1000,s of time to clean and reapply thermal paste. Love the channel and content

  • @max-lee
    @max-lee Před 3 lety +19

    so, wait 8 years before replacing thermal grease on your gpu.

  • @jonathan8087
    @jonathan8087 Před 3 lety +24

    Excellent timing for me who just got a 3080. Time to clean my 980 and sell it for $500.

    • @alouisschafer7212
      @alouisschafer7212 Před 3 lety +3

      its not even worth 200$ but some idiot will pay 500$

    • @user-jc2in3cp3g
      @user-jc2in3cp3g Před 3 lety

      @@alouisschafer7212 maybe I should sell my rtx 2060 for 600 xD

    • @jordiroodi5985
      @jordiroodi5985 Před 3 lety +1

      @@user-jc2in3cp3g You can get 700 for sure. Just look at ebay. Not saying anyone should perpetuate whats going on, but also when in rome...

  • @formetuno
    @formetuno Před 3 lety

    Finding something to pick on with gn. Damn near impossible. Keep it real and tysm gamer nexus. Boss :)

  • @starrims
    @starrims Před 3 lety

    I was thinking to make a similar project on my channel, but only with my GTX 1060. Thanks for this video in right time. I didn’t know there is a lot to learn :)

  • @surviver5738
    @surviver5738 Před 3 lety +6

    I expected that fall crash and bang.

  • @terakahn
    @terakahn Před 3 lety +4

    I had a GTS 250 for 5 years and the paste was just gone, so I cant imagine going longer than that.

    • @terakahn
      @terakahn Před 3 lety +2

      @@ginxxxxx you don't actually think they get that many cards do you

    • @terakahn
      @terakahn Před 3 lety +2

      @@ginxxxxx oh. You do actually believe that. Wow. Ok.

  • @daryl2328
    @daryl2328 Před 3 lety +1

    I have to clean my case out every month because I live with 2 smokers. Thank you for the tutorials.

  • @brumby92
    @brumby92 Před 3 lety

    I remember fixing a mates computer which was overheating. There was one giant dust bunny clogging the cooler and it was only two years old. Don't smoke in your room and keep your PC off the floor. Great results Steve.

  • @enmass90
    @enmass90 Před 3 lety +5

    We are truly in GPU hell now boys.

    • @georgemorley1029
      @georgemorley1029 Před 3 lety

      Or heaven, depending on how you look at existing hardware and maintaining it.

    • @laowai2000
      @laowai2000 Před 3 lety

      Sold 2 x 2nd cards purchased for grand total of USD 300, and with the cash purchased a GTX1080ti. No complaints here!

  • @JohnDavidSullivan
    @JohnDavidSullivan Před 3 lety +3

    We've got that exact Handdryer at my University where I work. "Feel the power" indeed. Dyson Airblade RIP.

  • @Daz555Daz
    @Daz555Daz Před rokem +1

    Just stripped, cleaned and repasted the old R9 270X 2GB that sits in the PC in my workshop. It was utterly filthy given the environment it lives in. I ran an extended Furmark stress test before and after.
    Before: Core temp 67°C, fan speed 53%.
    After: Core temp 54°C, fan speed 38%.
    With a normalised fan speed (before 53%) the core temp came down to 46°C.
    Great result!

  • @tomkavulic7178
    @tomkavulic7178 Před 3 lety +1

    This is a really useful video to do for the community. Hopefully it spreads to a more mainstream audience.

  • @surton91
    @surton91 Před 3 lety +3

    "Better airflow for my immune system"
    LOL

  • @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep
    @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep Před 3 lety +8

    Thermal cycles are what abuses cards the most? I must really clean mine then. Because I am a serial ragequitter.

    • @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep
      @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginxxxxx what. It is literally their job. You don't get mad at artists for hoarding all the coloured pencils.

  • @galactusgalan4233
    @galactusgalan4233 Před 3 lety

    Just want to say your content is awesome. I am not a tech guy at all and some of your content is well above my knowledge. However videos such as this are a huge help and gave me the confidence to do two full builds and starting refurbishing a 5 year old pc. Oh and Steve is hella funny.

  • @priestofsyrinx6681
    @priestofsyrinx6681 Před 2 lety

    I have an FTW3 1080 Ti and that thing is still a monster today. Not only that, but the cooling is so efficient so temperatures never go too high.

  • @DyslexicMitochondria
    @DyslexicMitochondria Před 3 lety +8

    The 2077 in cyberpunk means you'd be able to get current line of graphic cards in 2077 and then you'd be able to play the game

  • @mongoosemcmongoose2786
    @mongoosemcmongoose2786 Před 3 lety +21

    When Steve carried the cards precariously, all I could think was "if this was Linus, he would have dropped them 5 times already"

    • @quickplaya
      @quickplaya Před 2 lety +3

      It's because Linus has sausage fingers.

  • @a.sanford8731
    @a.sanford8731 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for this content. As it is impossible to get a new card today, it's more important than ever before to keep the cards you have alive. I do not presently know if you've done an overclocking guide for GPU's in recent history, but I feel now is also a good time for users to find ways to get the most out of their current hardware. Maybe something you could cover, or cover in greater detail?

  • @hydrocarbon8272
    @hydrocarbon8272 Před 3 lety +2

    After re-padding two 3080's I can say it's important to get the correct CRUSH thickness. I went from floppy Asus & Gigabyte pads to stiff Thermalright pads and needed 0.5mm thinner for some spots due to less squish/crush.