New CPU = runs rather hot and BSODs
Posted: 2011-03-23 04:03am
Here's the motherboard, and here's the CPU (mine is revision RB-C3).
There was some movement when I installed the CPU cooler (may have inadvertently spread out the thermal paste), and soon after I installed the CPU, my computer suffered its first BSOD in a long time. My first response (oddly enough) was to inspect the thermal compound, which seemed awfully thin to me -- before. I scraped as much off as possible from the CPU surface (and the "green" circuit board -- some thermal paste seemed to have gotten onto the top side of it) and the cooler before reapplying some thermal paste I happened to have laying around at home, then put it back in. After a BIOS update (from F1 to F5, the minimum for the CPU), it correctly displayed as a 3.4 GHz quad-core... though oddly my Windows Experience Index went down. However, while using a custom power plan based off of the High Performance plan, my system BSOD'ed several times, usually seeming to be driver-related (i.e. "atikmdag.sys," most recently "tcpip.sys") or page file-related, irrespective of whether I was logged into the standard user account or an administrator account, what I was doing, or even the power plan (it BSOD'd once when I was using custom settings). As such, my system is unacceptably less stable when I would use over a hundred Internet browsing tabs on only a 2.6 GHz dual-core CPU...
Also, it seems to run awfully hot for a CPU -- in my most recent experience, when I went into BIOS during a 'cold-start' boot, my CPU temperature went from 30 C to nearly 40 C in only a few minutes, despite its fan running at 3500+ RPM, and the "system temperature" rising by similar amounts in the same time period. As I type, even with a Power Saver or Balanced power plan, according to Core Temp 0.99.8 my CPU temperature tends towards the mid-to-high-90s, and at one point in a previous use session with the High Performance power plan it measured a whopping 58 C.
I hope that I haven't doomed this CPU by either using it at first without a BIOS upgrade (I did so soon afterward) or by poor thermal paste application? I've been told to get better thermal paste, but the worst-case scenario seems to be to get a replacement through Newegg's policy. As such, I'd appreciate any recommended solutions.
There was some movement when I installed the CPU cooler (may have inadvertently spread out the thermal paste), and soon after I installed the CPU, my computer suffered its first BSOD in a long time. My first response (oddly enough) was to inspect the thermal compound, which seemed awfully thin to me -- before. I scraped as much off as possible from the CPU surface (and the "green" circuit board -- some thermal paste seemed to have gotten onto the top side of it) and the cooler before reapplying some thermal paste I happened to have laying around at home, then put it back in. After a BIOS update (from F1 to F5, the minimum for the CPU), it correctly displayed as a 3.4 GHz quad-core... though oddly my Windows Experience Index went down. However, while using a custom power plan based off of the High Performance plan, my system BSOD'ed several times, usually seeming to be driver-related (i.e. "atikmdag.sys," most recently "tcpip.sys") or page file-related, irrespective of whether I was logged into the standard user account or an administrator account, what I was doing, or even the power plan (it BSOD'd once when I was using custom settings). As such, my system is unacceptably less stable when I would use over a hundred Internet browsing tabs on only a 2.6 GHz dual-core CPU...
Also, it seems to run awfully hot for a CPU -- in my most recent experience, when I went into BIOS during a 'cold-start' boot, my CPU temperature went from 30 C to nearly 40 C in only a few minutes, despite its fan running at 3500+ RPM, and the "system temperature" rising by similar amounts in the same time period. As I type, even with a Power Saver or Balanced power plan, according to Core Temp 0.99.8 my CPU temperature tends towards the mid-to-high-90s, and at one point in a previous use session with the High Performance power plan it measured a whopping 58 C.
I hope that I haven't doomed this CPU by either using it at first without a BIOS upgrade (I did so soon afterward) or by poor thermal paste application? I've been told to get better thermal paste, but the worst-case scenario seems to be to get a replacement through Newegg's policy. As such, I'd appreciate any recommended solutions.