I don't have any suggestions, but I just wanted to say that it's really cool that you're trying to save things from becoming waste.
If you manage to fix it, it's win-win-win.
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I don't have any suggestions, but I just wanted to say that it's really cool that you're trying to save things from becoming waste.
If you manage to fix it, it's win-win-win.
As long as the heat pipes don't leak it should still work.
Fix it? Be a lot cooler if you did.
Dang haven't seen this one in a few years
Beat me to it lol
If the heat plate is damaged or any of those heat pipes are pinched / cracked, then you're SOL. What a lot of people don't realise is there's liquid in those pipes that evaporates on the heat plate, condenses in the cooler, and then runs back to evaporate again.
Wait WHAT. I thought they were just pure copper/whatever heat conducting metal.
Heat pipes look fine from the angle shown. My main concern would be the connection from the heat pipes to the cold plate. Looks like there was enough torque to potentially break them free.
just bend the rest of your pc until the cooler fits, easy
Or do a Salvador Dali themed build
Put it on the hood of your car
It's possible, and if you do it right there shouldn't be too much structural damage that would affect conductivity. It's a lot of work though.
As long as the plate is even and clean, mounting is not bent, you should be fine.
If the mounting plate is not OK, be careful - - you could damage the mobo and cpu.
You should ask Noctua what they think, they have splendid customer support.
I would keep it as an involuntary art piece.
Good coolers are not that expensive. I'd write this one off, personally.
I see two ways forward: either you're risk averse and assume internal damages that will highly influence heat transfer or you trust in the automatic protection mechanisms or your CPU.
Personally I'd toss it but I'm old and I've burned more than one CPU back in the days with faulty or wrongly installed coolers.
I don't think that the risk is high nowadays but I'm (literally) burned in that regard.
I'm not even sure it would survive bending back so perhaps try that first and if it breaks completely you don't even have a decision on your hand :)
CPU thermal protection is pretty solid nowadays. I'm also old, and I too remember Athlons you could actually cook on, but in my general experience I've found they did learn from that and the thermal protections are not exactly a complex system. It's basically math, as far as calculating how much power is going in to how quickly it can heat up to where the thermal sensor is placed, and they simply shut it down before it's mathematically possible for the heat to reach a damaging level. It's very hard now to actually destroy a CPU due to internal overheating, at least any of the ones I've had various "incidents" with. They aggressively throttle down and shut down and are perfectly fine once properly cooled.
You could put the bottom part in a vise carefully and try bending the pipes back the way they go. Wouldn't have to be perfect as long as the base is in good form. Heatsink fins could be straightened with a butter knife
Not sure if needed, but heating it while bending may be beneficial as well
If you get it hot enough to make the metal easier to bend, it could be hot enough to bork the heat pipes
Unless you can't seat it flush against the CPU, I don't even see a problem. It's a metal heatsink. The piping being bent shouldn't affect its ability to transfer heat and the fins look fine. 🤷♂️
No expert on CPUs and coolers, but
This an assembly specifically designed to spread out heat, applying heat to the pipes will just make the whole thing hot. If you did take a giant blowtorch to it and got it hot enough to soften the pipes, you'd probably dry out the pipes (potentially explosively).
Heat pipes are cold worked in the factory. The metals chosen are ductile. Adding lots of heat will only add to the problems.
Cool spider sculpture!
I once customized a heat pipe for a tiny case. You can bend heat pipes around and they'll still work as long as you don't get a kink (pipe bent such that it flattens).
Yeah you could bend the top part back into place, it's just that with heat, it would make the process easier. Heat gun or blow torch would work, I'm all for trying to repair things rather than tossing it out.