🌡️ Keep Your Cool with Thermal Grizzly!
The Thermal Grizzly PhaseSheet PTM is a high-performance thermal pad designed for optimal heat transfer in CPUs, GPUs, and other electronic components. With its phase change material, it remains solid at room temperature and only liquefies at 45°C, allowing for easy application. Its non-electrically conductive nature ensures safety for sensitive electronics, while its durability guarantees stable thermal conductivity even after multiple thermal cycles.
W**3
Reliable and Efficient Cooling
If you're reading through reviews on this stuff, chances are you're looking to find out how it differs from standard thermal paste, and whether it's worth your time. Hopefully I can help you with that.Thermal Grizzly's Phase Change pads have many advantages over paste. Since I like to start reviews with the good, let's look at a few.Thermal paste dries out, and when it dries it loses its ability to conduct heat. It's a good practice to repaste every couple of years because of this. If you're the type of computer user who upgrades often, this probably won't apply to you since you're either getting rid of your old system before that paste dries, or you're constantly re-applying it anyway as you change cooling solutions or upgrade CPUs. On the other hand, if you like to run your systems as long as possible, these pads are for you--they DON'T dry out. Pretty nice stuff if you're going to be using them in a server or a system that won't see much in the way of regular maintenance.These pads also don't suffer from "pump out." Since your CPU and heat sink are usually made of different materials, they expand and contract at different rates. Over time, more and more paste gets pushed out until you've got areas with poor coverage. Phase change pads are solid at room temperature, and they turn into a sort of paste under high heat: your pads are expanding and contracting right along with your heatsink and CPU rather than being pushed out.I've repaired enough computers in my time to know that most of you don't apply thermal paste properly to begin with. Most folks fall into the "more is better" mindset and make a proper mess, like they're making a peanut butter sandwich. Others use far too little and have a lot of area uncovered. These pads take all the guesswork out of that by completely covering the die with a uniform layer.Also, if you're careful while removing your heat sink, you might be able to reuse the pad. It's solid at room temperature, remember, and it never dries out.If all that sounds good to you, here's how you use it.First, store the pad in the refrigerator until you're ready for it. It's solid enough at room temperature, but it'll rip less easily if it's cold. While the pad is chilling, remove your heatsink and clean off all that old paste. (Told you you use too much of it.) 99% rubbing alcohol works great for this. Take your pad out of the fridge, and line it up to your CPU surface. Use a Sharpie marker to mark off the length and width, then cut the pad to size.Now for the fun part: peel one side of plastic off the pad. Lay the exposed pad on your CPU, then press it down. Use your fingers to roll any air bubbles out of it. Then CAREFULLY... SLOWLY... peel the top plastic off. The pad is going to want to stick to the plastic more than it's going to want to stick to your CPU, so be patient with this. Once done, carefully install your heatsink (try not to slide it around, which might wrinkle the pad).Time to test temps, right? Well, no... not exactly. The pad needs a few hot/cold cycles in order to work its way into all the microscopic nooks and crannies. The general recommendation is to run a stress test for ten minutes, then power down the system to let things completely cool. Ten cycles like this is what most people recommend, but I've found four or five is enough. This is where Youtube reviewers tend to mess up, by the way: they'll slap on a pad, immediately run a stress test, then conclude the pads aren't as good as paste. Nothing could be further from the truth. Once cycled, you very likely will be getting lower temps than you would have gotten with tried-and-true paste.And you'll never have to apply it to that system again. That's my way of addressing the main disadvantage of the pads, which is that you could buy a tube of paste for what you're paying here. On the other hand, you're going to be applying that paste over and over again--and probably using too much of it anyway. (Don't worry, that's the last time I'll berate you for this.)The other downside is how meticulous you have to be about applying it. Just slow down and take your time. If the pad does rip, do your best to fix it and you should be fine.Highly recommended!
A**S
Best Thermal compound
1) Works better than Grizzly Kryonut thermal paste in terms of thermals2) Easy to apply. You can follow the instructions and put it in the fridge. Or you can apply it to the CPU, take a can of air, turn it upside down, aim the straw at the CPU and squeeze for 2 seconds. It should freeze the compound. Then take off the plastic with tweezers.3) It's reusable since it turns from solid into a liquid every time. If you're switching to a different cooling solution. 80% of the compound is squeezed out around the sides of the CPU. Just collect those leftovers, place them on top of the CPU in bonfire method (Pea method) apply the cooler. Once you turn On the PC, It'll turn to liquid and 80% of the compound will squeeze around the CPU. Then tighten the cooler again.
Z**R
Dropped my GPU hot spot 20-30 degrees
This worked wonders for me. My RX7900 GRE that is under a year old started overheating and shutting down my system. My temps were only around 60c but I had a hot spot temp of 100-110c under load.I decided to repast my GPU with this and now my system sits at 60c with a hotspot of 79c after an hour stress test.I found it was easy to apply following the instructions and it fixed my problem.
D**G
Easy to use, works well, takes some time to break in
They seem to work well. Easy to use when you put it in the freezer for a bit. Just make sure you take off the plastic! It takes a few days to break in but you should see a 5-10 degree difference in temperatures. I did atleast.
I**E
Fantastic for thin laptops that struggle to cool themselves from factory.
My 2019 MacBook Air was ceaselessly thermal throttle and hit its temperature ceiling, even though I swapped the old thermal paste. Applying this to only the CPU die (not the PCH) resolved the issue. It still slows down under maximum load, it quickly stops throttling and the temperatures return to normal. This was easy to apply and, although it’s somewhat pricey, the performance increase is notable and it’s easier to apply than normal paste. At first, the square seems small, but the tiny portion needed for application shows just how much is actually included with this.
R**.
Awful temps even at stock.
Awful temps right now, I'm idling at 60 C with a Noctua DH-15 on 13700k running at 5.3. Every thermal compound I've bought from Thermal Grizzly only last 4 or 6 months before it dries out. Hoping the phase changing nature of this thermal paste would save me but nope. Done with Thermal Grizzly.
R**7
Runs a little warmer than fresh paste, but shouldn't "pump out" like paste does.
This stuff works great, I bought this for my laptop because the Arctic MX-6 paste I have been using rapidly degrades in performance. The initial performance is amazing, but it takes only about a month for it to cool like some old dried out paste that was five years old or something. This product keeps my laptop almost as cool while gaming, but is expected to maintain that performance for a very long time. I had no issues at all installing it for the first time, I suggest reading and following the instructions that are provided for best results. The only thing I wish I had done differently was to have a micrometer to measure the CPU and GPU die size instead of just eyeballing it, and to have a sharper set of scissors to cut the pad down.
S**T
Effective and easy to apply
For the relatively low price, it's really easy to install if you follow the included instructions and so far pretty effective. Once you get a few thermal cycles in, spikes decrease and overall performance increases. On my ryzen 7 9800x3d with a 240mm aio, I'm seeing an average of at least 5°C lower temperatures under load, with my idle temps being around 8°C lower. You can trim the pad to fit your cpu, so it's compatible with pretty much any processor. The packaging kept it perfectly flat too, so no worries on it being folded, not that it would matter much since both sides are covered. Just make sure you follow the instructions and freeze it for a few minutes before you try to work with it, it makes it easier!
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