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The Report of My Thermal Death Have Been...

A reader writes "Not too long ago, Tom's Hardware posted a video of the grisly events that take place when the heatsink is removed on an AMD Athlon MP 1.2GHz in an attempt to show that the chip has inadequate thermal protection unlike the Pentium 4. Apparently, this is not the case. This new video, which looks like was done by AMD, shows the system continuing to work when the heatsink is removed. Even 9 minutes of Quake3 without the fan operating wasn't enough to destroy the processor. So who is right? It's in AMD's best interest to show that their product doesn't disintigrate under extreme conditions. " Update: 10/30 14:11 GMT by H : Note that it was Terry 'quad3d' Wang that actually did the video - not AMDZone.

3 of 559 comments (clear)

  1. Hardware p0rn by Codeala · · Score: 5, Funny

    I object to this type of video trash. They provide an unrealistic, degrading portrayals of CPUs that take off their heat sinks/cooling units for no apparent reason! Like that sort of things happen all the time in real life.

    I don't care who is making them, it must be stopped. Will someone think of the children!

    --

    Codeala - Just another mindless drone
  2. Another test.... .45 to the core by Catbeller · · Score: 5, Funny

    I propose a new test: strap the mobo+Athlon to a wall.

    Scientifically fire a .45 into the heart of the processor. Run performance test.

    Tests may show that the Athlon does not hold up under impact of a projectile. A video of this process may be necessary to prove the point to the skeptical.

    Naysayers and Athlon proponents may argue that this test does not reflect real-world operating conditions, but who cares -- it's a great video.

  3. Re:Danger? by hattig · · Score: 3, Funny
    I would put the risk of a fire from an overheated CPU at about the same as the risk of being run over by a Vorlon battlecruiser.

    1) CPU burns out internally, then everything stops
    2) Nice metal case around computer

    You can set fire to chocolate if you use it as a heatsink though - look at the HardOCP archives.