DIY CPU Thermal Grease, Using Diamond Dust 210
tygerstripes writes "The dysfunctor has spotted an impressive project over on InventGeek.com; an innovative chap has developed his own thermal compound for improved CPU cooling, using diamond dust — the best available material for thermal conduction — as the key ingredient. In spite of the quick-&-dirty DIY nature of the project, the gains in cooling performance are remarkable, especially considering the material cost was only $33. Given the price many enthusiasts will pay for a top-end cooler, it's easy to imagine this product coming to market quite soon."
Finally (Score:5, Funny)
...a practical use for your wife's jewelry!
Re:Finally (Score:5, Funny)
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I hate to feed the trolls, but I see no mention of "hardware hack".
If you're speaking of the tags, well, they aren't the summary are they?
Maybe you should learn the definition of "tag".
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Hardest "natural" material on earth. Aggregated diamond nanorods are currently the hardest.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_nanorods [wikipedia.org]
Sorry to be a bastard, but I'm a bastard.
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The hardest? Nanorods? I'm sure there's a penis-joke in there somewhere.
Re:Finally (Score:5, Informative)
Commercially available here [heatsinkfactory.com]
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Aaaand thank you.
Myself, I'll always use Ceramique. Many good reasons to use a ceramic based one over metal or diamond when doing hardcore cooling and ease of removal for reseating.
Reviews:
http://hardwarelogic.com/news/137/ARTICLE/2752/3/2008-03-03.html [hardwarelogic.com]
http://www.bjorn3d.com/read.php?cID=1133&pageID=3881 [bjorn3d.com]
*shrug* (Score:5, Funny)
I feel super cool with angel dust, I don't think I'll switch.
Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:2)
I admit, I don't know jack about jewelry, but ain't diamonds the kind of carbon that's supposedly expensive?
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:5, Informative)
not in the incredibly low grade diamonds that aren't used in jewellery. Very small, damaged stones with poor colour (the kind that don't even qualify for the 4 C's) are used in industrial settings - ex. diamond saw blades.
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Insightful)
(producers of the natural ones are Not Happy with this...)
Sellers. Something makes me doubt DeBeers has ever produced a natural diamond.
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Funny)
Not true. It seems that the people who are working on this keep on having "unfortunate accidents."
I wonder if making synthetic diamonds involves placing black cats on broken mirrors under ladders on Friday the 13th?
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especially considering the material cost was only $33.
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Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Informative)
Or, it could just cost $7.99 [heatsinkfactory.com]. I guarantee 1.5 ounces will last you at least a dozen installs, if not more.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Insightful)
It really should. That's an achievement worth something! They also need to add a "falling for a goatse troll" achievement - but /. went downhill when they started showing domains after every link.
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I, for one, have configured Slashdot so that domains are never shown.
I advise everyone who cares to live adventurously to do the same.
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I feel ignored. Bummer.
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Former?
When did it end?
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When Russia entered the market. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond [wikipedia.org] And read under "Mining, sources and production" for most of it. It doesn't due justice to how that market opening up lowered prices
But really there are 6 major players now, not just one. However De Beers still is nearly 40% of the market.
I for one would love to see diamonds become as common and cheap as catseyes or obsidian so that it can be used more for its non jewel properties more.
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When Russia entered the market. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond [wikipedia.org] And read under "Mining, sources and production" for most of it. It doesn't due justice to how that market opening up lowered prices
But really there are 6 major players now, not just one. However De Beers still is nearly 40% of the market.
I for one would love to see diamonds become as common and cheap as catseyes or obsidian so that it can be used more for its non jewel properties more.
What's wrong with the man made diamonds for those purposes?
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Volume for starters. And the fact they produce mostly colored diamonds for a higher resale. If your manufacturing diamonds, your cost is the same no matter the grade or color, so why sell for low grade when you can sell for jewelry?
Whats wrong with man made diamonds for jewelry purposes?
If the diamond industry wasn't putting so much into marketing natural diamonds as real, and manufactured diamonds as subpar or fake, the prices could drop a lot. As anyone with funding could start producing large quantiti
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I can break your whole world with one question:
What exactly makes a stone out of a material that costs next to nothing to produce so valuable?
Bonus question:
Or do you mean the stuff that people are killed for?
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I can break your whole world with one question:
What exactly makes a stone out of a material that costs next to nothing to produce so valuable?
Bonus question:
Or do you mean the stuff that people are killed for?
A stone is not aesthetically pleasing to the majority of humans. However, due to the refractive index, a properly faceted gemstone can be beautiful. The value is determined by scarcity of the resource, and the beauty in the eye of the beholder.
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:5, Informative)
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Ah... But is it as much fun to use that dust, as it is pulverizing your wife's diamonds in your mention's basement(a.k.a the secret cave under the house)
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That's what I thought but then I thought to check and apparently* they now only have a 40% share of the market, down from 80%. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Beers#End_of_diamond_monopoly [wikipedia.org]
*According to the Wikipedia
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Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:5, Informative)
Nope. Jewellery is nowadays just a little part of the worldwide diamond industry, and while it often uses natural, mined diamonds (mainly because some weird people with bucketloads of cash want to be sure that the diamond they wear is natural and mined, even though it is perfectly possible to produce a diamond of equal aesthetic value in a lab), which are quite expensive, the biggest demand for diamonds is in the tools industry. Most of it goes into production of diamond-tipped cutting tools (which are actually coated in diamond powder or small diamond shards, not made of solid crystal) for the market, the rest is used to make specialized cutting and grinding elements in machines that produce solid carbide tools.
Just check eBay or your local hardware store for the prices of diamond-tipped tools - they're only about twice as expensive as high-quality HSS and often cheaper than good solid carbide cutters, because they're actually just HSS with some diamond powder coating, easy and quick to produce.
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Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Insightful)
Only because there's no demand for such a product. If there were a market for billions of them, production could be automated at a cheap per-stone cost.
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Sure it is "easy" to make diamonds for industrial roles. But it to make one with the size (not to mention color and clarity) for fine jewelry is not.
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Why would there by any real labor cost to cut synthetic diamonds? If they all come out the same size and shape automating it should not be very hard.
Re:Diamond dust is cheap? (Score:4, Insightful)
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You can machine-cut diamonds quite excellently, however*.. depending on how much you want to spend on the machine, it'll come out either quite good, or excellent.
Keep in mind that professional lapidarians also cut using machines.. they don't sit there with a little diamond-gritted tool polishing away for hours on end, holding the diamond between their bare fingers.
The only 'problems' come from size, shape, and any potential natural faults along which the material may be likely to splice while working it, an
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As if you couldn't program a cutter to cut in percentages of the automatically measured lattice size.
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And we all know what upstanding members of their local and international community the companies that run diamond mines and their distributors are.
Diamonds can be made industrially (Score:5, Informative)
Look up Gemesis and Apollo. Technology has progressed to the point that we can synthesize diamonds. I don't mean make cubic zirconium, I mean real diamond, made in a lab. It is still expensive in relation to a lot of materials, but it is cheaper than mined diamonds, and getting cheaper.
B&W use it for their tweeters in their high end speakers, as an example.
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Contrary to common believe, not all diamonds are mined. Many are simply collected from sand and dirt, right off the ground.
Hell, even the movie "Blood Diamond" got their facts straight in this regard.
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I'm sorry. That swooshing noise over my head probably annoyed you. ;)
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LEAVE MARY JANE ALONE! SHE HAD TO LEAVE SPIDER-MAN, DON'T TRY TO CHEAPEN THAT WITH YOUR PARLOUR TRICKS!!!
Yelling? Why yes. It is like yelling. That's the point of capslock. Well, that and cruise control for cool.
bottom line (Score:5, Informative)
I'm gonna throw out a spoiler: In a test situation, at full load, the best temperature under Arctic Silver was 57C, while this diamond dust compound achieved 38C. The nearly 20 degree difference is huge, and would definitely make a difference in overclocking. I'm hoping the price can come down when produced in industrial quantities, because it'll be enormously worthwhile.
Re:bottom line (Score:5, Interesting)
57C, while this diamond dust compound achieved 38C.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, this sounds like something that needs to be reproduced because it sounds too good to be true man... Did it say that in TFA?
runs off to read TFA for the first time in his life...
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it sounds too good to be true man
I agree.
It seems there's one company already producing similar stuff:
http://www.innovationcooling.com/overview.htm [innovationcooling.com]
But they don't claim such a huge difference.
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They claim it's 5-6 times as thermally conductive. There is no way they could make an actual claim about cooling because that completely depends on the case/fans/cpu/etc.
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Informative)
Thermal conductivity is a function of the materials in use, not what it's pushed up against.
Copper rates at 401 W/(m-K), diamond rates at between 900 - 2320 W/(m-K). 2320/401 = 5.79.
Now, we're not comparing pure copper to diamond, but it's entirely possible that the compound they're comparing to is that much "worse" than their own.
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Funny)
Thermal conductivity is a function of the materials in use
You sir win a cookie!!!
The browser type not the tasty ones. We need to track you to make sure you stop spreading knowledge here on slashdot... BURN the WITCH! wait, I mean... AUTO MOD him DOWN!
54C, not 57 (Score:2)
Chagrined SHAD0W is chagrined!
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Well, you were kinda right *both* times... it was 57C before "curing" and 54C after curing. The diamond dust mixture was 38C immediately.
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arctic 7 pro cooler / ANTEC THREE HUNDRED chase / Arctic Silver 5 thermal compound (~90E)
Idle: 33C CPU / Core 0 & 1 @ 48C
Load: 40C CPU / Core 0 & 1 @ 58C
Room temp. 26-27 (Hot summer atm.)
I can reach the 3.4 / 3.5, but I need to rise the vcore to 1.6 / 1.7
My problem right now is the core temperature not the CPU surface.
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That's when you remove the IHS and apply this diamond compound all over :D
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Interesting)
I call shenanigans.
The thermal conductivity of Arctic Silver and this stuff couldn't be so great that a layer as thin as the crack-filler between a chip lid and a cooling-fin plate would amount to a 19C difference in temperature.
I want to see independent reproduction of the experiment.
Either it's totally bogus, or something was not installed correctly in one of the two setups. The heat sink on the 57C, or the thermometer on the 38C.
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It makes sense if you consider that the piece(s) of diamond could be contacting both surfaces at the same time. Think of how this would work if there was no grease component and just a thin layer of diamond dust- not practical but the heat would still conduct.
Mod parent up! (Score:5, Informative)
The type of paste you use has very little difference. Let's not forget this comparison which includes toothpaste [dansdata.com].
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Informative)
It's also enormously worthwhile to just put the right amount of thermalpaste on your cpu and mount it properly, something which will get you the same temps he recorded with his diamond dust compound (coughICdiamond7cough) with just about any of the other aftermarket pastes.
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Insightful)
The nearly 20'C difference is too much to be true. In particular, there is no mention of the ambient room temperature, and since the tests were performed on different days, it is a pretty important discrepancy.
Had the tests all been performed in quick succession, the results would be far more representative. For all we know, the Arctic Silver measurement may have been taken in the summer, inside a closed and poorly chassis while dinner was cooking, while the diamond measurement might have been taken in the middle of winter with the window open.
Pulling numbers out of my ass, I would realistically expect no more than a 4-5'C improvement with diamond paste over the regular stuff.
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Re:bottom line (Score:5, Interesting)
I was watching, I think, Nova Science Now. There was a segment about artificial diamonds, and a researcher had the host hold a penny up to a cube of ice, and then a chunk of diamond up to the ice. With the penny, he waited a second and said "I feel the cold." With the diamond, he instantly said "Hey, the ice is melting."
Re:bottom line (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks to your comment, I found the video you were talking about:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZOsSPsTYi0#t=3m10s [youtube.com]
Re:bottom line (Score:4, Informative)
There is a manufacturer: http://www.innovationcooling.com/ [innovationcooling.com]
Everything should be made out of ... (Score:2)
been done before (Score:2, Interesting)
in the do-it-yourself flashlight-making community.
Example:
http://dmcleish.com/CPF/L1-Diamond/index.html
Where did I put that? (Score:5, Funny)
Existing for several decades. (Score:5, Informative)
This technology is not new. Diamonds have been used as heat sinks and thermal conductors for processors in sattelites since the 70s (natural diamonds in big sizes, so expensive). Since about 1992 there have been succesful efforts to sinter diamond dust (waste material from the polishing process of gemstones, and now increasingly synthethic diamonds, both are not expensive) for use in thermal conductors.
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Reminds me of a certain Bond Film when you mentioned diamonds in satellites.
Does this change the old adage? (Score:5, Funny)
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Slashdot or SlashMold? (Score:5, Informative)
That guide was posted a while ago...
Here is a company that sells it premixed and has been around for several years.
http://www.innovationcooling.com/ [innovationcooling.com]
An idea that was recently (2 days ago) discussed on Hack a Day was using diamond stropping paste
http://hackaday.com/2009/08/03/diamond-thermal-paste/ [hackaday.com]
Here is a reliable review of Diamond thermal paste.
http://hardwarelogic.com/news/137/ARTICLE/2752/2008-03-03.html [hardwarelogic.com]
As far as just hoping on Ebay and buying your own, good luck. Finding a distributor for your dust and suspension will take you some time.
I think the most important thing people should consider and hasn't been mentioned so far is that the equation for heat transport is linear. Changing the adulterant in the suspension will be more noticeable as the temp increases. IMHO for most people it's a total waste of materials, for some people it's a decent alternative, and for a very small number of people it's a good idea to spend the time locating materials to make a batch.
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People also keep forgetting that they're using passive cooling too so even if they get the most badass water-cooling rig with a dog sized radiator and 12 delta screamer fans they're still not getting below ambient.
Somebody... (Score:2)
...cue up some Jeff Beck
Way too much work... (Score:2)
$33? You can buy a tube of IC Diamond for only $7. DIY isn't too interesting when it costs so much more than off-the-shelf...
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It says 7 carat for IC Diamond. Didn't the article mention 28 carats and much higher gain? Or does the 7 carat mean 7 carat after mixing it with the other components?
Since no one reads the article... (Score:4, Informative)
Idle - Max load
42c - 57c - Arctic Silver with a fresh application
39c - 54c - Arctic Silver with 2 week cure
29c - 38c - Diamond Grease with a fresh application
These numbers are almost too good to be true. A 19c drop under load with diamond paste? With my 4GHz OC'd system, I'm happy getting 38c when idling. If this data is true, it will really be revolutionary.
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Since no one reads the article
Don't you mean, er, "artical"? I suppose it smacks of me being a spelling nazi, but it makes a site's already too-good-to-be-true claims sound even less valid when the first thing I see on the main page is "Featured Artical", and then realize the same typo is made in equally large text partway down the page.
It's like when someone insists they're an expert on computers and then says that they bought a Jesus (as in "Hay-Soos") EeePC.
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But we alwase can use some help funding new projects for you all. So please donate!
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So you are saying that this plea from the InventGeek site didn't make you want to donate:
But we alwase can use some help funding new projects for you all. So please donate!
Is the new project a good spellchecker? I'll donate to that.:)
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A lapped heatsink base, match-lapped to the heatspreader took me from 60C to 55C under load. I thought that was a epic reduction for 40 minutes work.
I wonder how this would work with carefully lapped heatspreader, even bigger reductions?
Compared to AS5 (Score:3, Insightful)
Diamond Powder Compound Cost:
100 CTS 60k mesh industrial Diamond Powder: $50
(0.2g : Carat)
36g of Silicon Grease: $20
Final Volume: 56g @ $65 or $1.25/g
Arctic Silver 5: 12g @ $18 or $1.50/g
Arrested Development (Score:3, Funny)
Lindsay:
There's a cream with real diamonds in it. I can actually smear diamonds on my face! And it's only $400 a tub! That's, like, what, like, a million diamonds for $400? A million bleeping diamonds!
Diamond coated razor blades (Score:2)
While we're on this topic, why don't razor blade manufacturers use diamond dust/shards for the tips of the shaver blades?
I'm sure some will be thinking 'conspiracy' so joe punter has to buy more, but I'm hoping there's a more rational explanation.
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Interesting.
But how about if the diamond is itself made into the blade shape? Even if it's just the 1st mm at the tip. Yeah, it would be expensive, but many rich folks could afford it.
It just doesn't add up... (Score:5, Interesting)
If we take a rather thick installation of AS5 at 0.015 inches and assume the contact area is a square with sides of
He claims to have a new thermal compound which reduces the temperature by 14 degrees. Now lets take a look at some more realistic numbers... 1 sq in area, 75 watts, 0.010in thick paste, same 8W/m*K and you get a tempeture delta of 4 degrees to cross.
Furthermore, when we start looking at websites that have done reviews of thermal pastes like [url=http://hardwarelogic.com/news/137/ARTICLE/2752/3/2008-03-03.html]IC Diamond 7 Carat[/url] and they show a range of 1-2 degrees difference between AS5 and the paste it makes it hard to belive.
For a little more background, perhaps we should consider what is going on here. We have some material that is being used for thermal conduction, silver or diamonds, and to that we are have a material it is being suspended into. Thermal conductivity of silver is over 400 W/m*K and artic silver which is made from pure silver plus the suspension yields a conductivity of 8 w/m*K. The idea that exchanging that for something with a thermal conductivity of somewhere between 900 and 2000W/m*K is going to yield a paste with orders of magnitude better thermal conductivity.
So based on that, I'd like to call shens. If he made a mistake with his numbers or he faked them I don't know, all I know is the numbers he is reporting are outside the realm of reality.
I agree. Bad math and bad physics in the article. (Score:4, Informative)
I was going to just mod you up, but I figured your post would soon be at 5 anyway. (if not, mod parent up!)
Yes, you're absolutely right. Lots of bad physics and a completely incorrect conclusion in that article. If there is an improvement in the thermal interface, the heatsink should get HOTTER. All of the heat goes somewhere. That's the first law of thermodynamics... conservation of energy.
You can break it down to a thermal resistance model which is functionally equivalent to an electrical resistance model. Difference in temperature is the "voltage" that drives the flow of heat (current). The heat (current) is a fixed value. The resistances are the various materials the heat has to flow through to get to the air. It can take many parallel and series paths to get out and you can build a resistance network to calculate heat flow through each "path". One way is through the IC leads, into the board, and eventually to the air... or the most direct path is through the heat spreader, through the thermal interface material, into the heatsink and eventually to the air. If the heatsink reads a lower temperature, that means less heat is flowing through the heatsink and that heat is taking a more difficult path to get out and thus the IC junction temperature is HIGHER. That's BAD.
So yes, the math doesn't add up. The thermal interface between the IC and the heatsink should be spread so thin that the thermal resistance across it is almost negligible. Thermal grease is only there generally because it's it's much higher conductivity than air and if you don't have it, all you have is air in all of the little surface imperfections of the heatsink and heat slug on the IC. Adding solid particles to the grease only serves to hold the heatsink and IC heat slug further apart, so even if it's great conductivity, it's generally the wrong thing to do.
-S
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There is already grit mixed in with Arctic Silver. Large enough to feel.
What I'm wondering about is whether this stuff is any different than using readily available diamond compound from MSC for 15 bucks a 5gm syringe.
http://www1.mscdirect.com/CGI/GSDRVSM?PACACHE=000000104110495 [mscdirect.com]
--
BMO
This diamond paste project FAILS (Score:2)
Arctic Silver with a fresh application: System Max load 57c
Diamond Grease with a fresh application: System Max load 38c
The author notes that the fancy diamond paste results in LESS heat at the heat sink.
Conclusion: The home-made paste is more of an insulator than the commercial stuff, as the same amount of heat is being generated, but that heat just isn't making it to the heat sink!
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If you RTFA, you'd know that onboard and external monitoring was used. Onboard means the embedded temperature sensor in the CPU itself. It doesn't get much more accurate then that, we stopped using external CPU monitoring devices for CPU's 5 or 6 years ago when they started increasing the pin count, and figured "What's one or two more pins, when we're designing against thermal runaway."
Where to get diamond dust (Score:2)
Check here [youtube.com].
I can see it now... (Score:2)
>DIY CPU Thermal Grease, Using Diamond Dust
I can see it now:
"Mum, can I borrow your engagement ring?"
Re:Diamonds? (Score:4, Funny)