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Newegg.com has Arctic Cooling 92mm CPU Cooler (A7P-75000023) on sale for $19.99 - $19.99 Rebate = Free. Shipping is $3.99. Thanks TDMVP73
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Hey guys,
I didn't see this posted, so I thought I'd share.
Arctic Cooling A7P-75000023 92mm CPU Cooler - FREE After Rebate + S&H @ Newegg.com
LINK [newegg.com]
Item Price: $19.99
$19.99 Mail-In Rebate [newegg.com]
AR Cost: FREE
Shipping is $3.99 or FREE for Shop Runner Members.
Rebate has a LIMIT OF 2 PER HOUSEHOLD.
Rebate is valid from 02/25/13 to 02/28/13.
NOTE: This offer is different from previous offers (#1, #2 and #3), so you can get an additional 2 coolers if you wish.
I didn't see this posted, so I thought I'd share.
Arctic Cooling A7P-75000023 92mm CPU Cooler - FREE After Rebate + S&H @ Newegg.com
LINK [newegg.com]
Item Price: $19.99
$19.99 Mail-In Rebate [newegg.com]
AR Cost: FREE
Shipping is $3.99 or FREE for Shop Runner Members.
Rebate has a LIMIT OF 2 PER HOUSEHOLD.
Rebate is valid from 02/25/13 to 02/28/13.
NOTE: This offer is different from previous offers (#1, #2 and #3), so you can get an additional 2 coolers if you wish.
View Forum Thread




Clean the HSF and processor with Arctic Silver Arcticlean Thermal material Remover & Surface Purifier ACN-60ML (2-PC-SET) - OEM [newegg.com]
...then apply ARCTIC MX4 Thermal Paste - 4gram. [newegg.com]
If you're just doing this one heatsink this one time, isopropyl alcohol (the purer, the better) will do a good job for cleaning the mating surfaces of the heat-sink and the processor.
Basically, any thermal compound will do for a stock system (
See this youTube video which I've linked to start at the 17m20s mark for an example of the "spread" method of thermal paste application. The other method would be the grain-of-rice-to-pea sized dab, where the pressure of the mounted HSF does the spreading. Oh yeah, there's also the other-other method of putting a stripe (or two or three) on the processor. Unless you lay a stripe down on each copper pipe of the type heatsink shown in this video. Right.
There are many variations, they should all work well for a stock setup. Which ever method you use, don't use too much.
Newegg TV: How To Build a Computer - Part 2 - The Build (@17m20s) [youtube.com]
Is this what you were asking? Probably not
Yes, adhesive not better than thermal compound, just for use where there is no other means to mechanically mount a cooler. Typical use is on motherboards when, say, Northbridge, voltage regulator, brand-X ethernet chips, etc, overheat in use.
TIP: Try adding an almost equal amount of Arctic Silver 5 to your thermal adhesive mixture if you think you'll ever need to remove your heat sink. It should adhere almost as well, but make it possible to remove your heat sink at a later date without the resources of a machine shop and chemistry lab.
· Note: AM2/AM2+/AM3/ AM3+ and FM1/FM2 socket dimensions are the same. The only difference in these sockets is the actual CPU itself. Not the cooler mounting.
All of the heatsinks on Newegg that specifically claim FM2 compatibility [newegg.com] seem to be overkill for a 65W A10. I've always wanted to try the low profile COOLER MASTER GeminII M4 [newegg.com].
http://www.frostytech.com/article...234&page=4
It certainly won't come anywhere close to a tower cooler, even a smaller tower cooler like a CM TX3. Just because it's cheap doesn't make it worth the trouble of using. If you are looking for lower temps and/or lower noise spend a couple extra bucks on a modern design.
for $15 you can get a Dynatron G950 without a rebate hassle.
http://www.mwave.com/mwave/SKUSea...S4yJs8v9nM
or plenty of rocketfish rebranded TX3 on ebay.
Yes, adhesive not better than thermal compound, just for use where there is no other means to mechanically mount a cooler. Typical use is on motherboards when, say, Northbridge, voltage regulator, brand-X ethernet chips, etc, overheat in use.
TIP: Try adding an almost equal amount of Arctic Silver 5 to your thermal adhesive mixture if you think you'll ever need to remove your heat sink. It should adhere almost as well, but make it possible to remove your heat sink at a later date without the resources of a machine shop and chemistry lab.
tnx. Just for the cool factor, shame you missed the Thermaltake V1 which was a Shell Shocker deal about a week ago.
· Note: AM2/AM2+/AM3/ AM3+ and FM1/FM2 socket dimensions are the same. The only difference in these sockets is the actual CPU itself. Not the cooler mounting.
All of the heatsinks on Newegg that specifically claim FM2 compatibility [newegg.com] seem to be overkill for a 65W A10. I've always wanted to try the low profile COOLER MASTER GeminII M4 [newegg.com].
I have no particular recommendation.
I've extracted some results From Frostytech's review of the 212 EVO. [frostytech.com]
Note that even the monster Noctua NH-D14 at $80.99 [newegg.com] performs only 1.6°C better for $50 more.
Enjoy your build.
$16.99 after $10.00 rebate card
Rebate [newegg.com] expires on 3/11/13
If you're eligible, there is also a "15% OFF ALL CPU Cooling Products" Promo Code from one of those targeted Newegg mailings: BTEXTXS37, making it $12.94 AR/AC/FS
(Promo code "Expires at 11:59PM PST 3/10/2013 or SOONER based on fund availability.")
...not to temp you