More evidence why Compaq sold out to HP.
I'm presently changing the mobo out on a Compaq Presario desktop machine that has a Duron 700 in it for a friend of mine (it was given to him). The mobo's ide controller is going out, so I bought a cheap Asus mATX board to replace the POS board Compaq had put in it. Anyways, I'm stripping out components off the mobo this evening and pull the hsf off the cpu and set it to the side, then pull the proc out of the socket and the proc is sparkling clean, not a trace of thermal grease or bubblegum TIM material. Seeing that this is kind of odd, I then look at the hsf to see what kind of thermal interface they used and I got a big laugh. Those dumbasses on Compaq's assembly line never removed the plastic strip off the TIM and that poor tough little Duron has been running for freaking years like this!
Now, you can't tell me that even the old Tbird and Spitfire Durons can't take a beating. There's no telling how hot that poor little proc got during it's lifetime and it is still kicking right along.
Now, you can't tell me that even the old Tbird and Spitfire Durons can't take a beating. There's no telling how hot that poor little proc got during it's lifetime and it is still kicking right along.
0
Comments
And we thought Timex was tough.
If only today's proc's could take a beating like that.
I loaded office 2003 on my sisters dell p4 2.0 with 256mg pc2100 ram and on my duron 1gig with 512 pc133 ram.. 12 min on the dell 5 min on the duron...
He didn't. He was running the cpu with nothing between it and the heatsink for quite a few months, with the computer on all the time. He overclocked, too Yeah, he got sky-high temps, but it still worked flawlessly.
~Cyrix
BTW, I'm typing this on the little Duron that could. I tell you what, that little bugger sure has lived a hard life. I reused the oem heatsink, but upgraded the fan from a 60 X 10 mm Delta to a 60 X 25 mm Sunon and this proc's temp is running at 47° C while folding and idles around 43° C. I'd hate to see what temps it was running at with that plastic strip across the TIM; that old POS Compaq board didn't have hardware monitoring even in bios. :shakehead
So far, his free machine cost $83 for the mobo and new ram (old board used SDRAM) and I found that the psu it had in it had a very low 12v rail (about 11.3v), so I installed an old 300 watt psu I had laying around and I also added an 80 mm exhaust case fan. I guess I'll charge him another $20 for the psu and 2 fans, but the labor is free because this thing is going to fold for me.
~Cyrix
I would like to get a 1.8 (because they are $41) too, just for another pc to use.