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Reddit mentions of Thermal Grizzly Carbonaut Thermal Pad, 38 × 38 × 0.2 mm

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Thermal Grizzly Carbonaut Thermal Pad, 38 × 38 × 0.2 mm. Here are the top ones.

Thermal Grizzly Carbonaut Thermal Pad, 38 × 38 × 0.2 mm
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    Features:
  • Those thermal pads are made from a carbon-based polymer with nanoparticles; They have a high thermal conductivity of 62.5 W/mk
  • The non-adhesive and flexible carbon thermal padding can be used repeatedly and, unlike pastes, does not dry out
  • The thermal conductive pad meets the expectations of gamers and IT enthusiasts alike, who are primarily looking for a high quality product from Thermal Grizzly
  • The thermal pad material is virtually non-degradable, so its properties are solid and its lifespan almost unlimited (rumored to be up to 15 years)
  • Suitable for CPU cooling, GPU cooling, and any application that requires the use of pads instead of thermally conductive pastes; Carbonaut is an electrical conductor - avoid contact between thermal pad and transistors or transformers
Specs:
Height1.968503935 Inches
Length3.93700787 Inches
Number of items1
Size38 × 38 × 0,2 mm
Weight0.02 Kilograms
Width3.93700787 Inches

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Found 3 comments on Thermal Grizzly Carbonaut Thermal Pad, 38 × 38 × 0.2 mm:

u/RiftBladeMC · 5 pointsr/buildapc

Thermal pads are typically about 3-4°C worse than thermal paste, however the hassle it saves is nice.

The best pads are Thermal Grizzly Carbonaut's, this is the version for Ryzen CPU's.

u/Dibrom · 1 pointr/HomeServer

CPU upgrades are more complicated then it seems. If you buy a Ryzen 3000 now and say 2-3 years down the line you want to upgrade it's going to be a little hard. First the new AMD cpus aren't going to work on your existing board (AM4 is on it's last gen right now). So unless you can find a used higher SKU Ryzen 3, you're going to need to update your mobo as well. Maybe even RAM? That's a whole system upgrade there. If you plan to upgrade you're going to need to upgrade fairly often and quickly to expect to be able to reuse parts.


If you're just talking about the act of building a computer, there are lost of great guides on YouTube and it's not as hard as it would seem.

If you don't want to deal with paste I highly recommenced thermal pads like:
https://www.amazon.com/Innovation-Cooling-Graphite-Thermal-Pad/dp/B07CKVW18G/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=thermal+pad&qid=1569897016&s=electronics&sr=1-4 OR
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07PHLJYWK/ref=psdc_2998409011_t3_B07CKVW18G
It's going to preform close to the best thermal paste but saves so much headache.

x570 has great features but you're never going to use them in a server (pci-e 4.0, overclocking features). But the same really goes for an x470 board as well (Multi-gpu. I say save money on a B450 board.

Go over to r/buildapc for more advice.