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posted by cmn32480 on Saturday December 05 2015, @06:28PM   Printer-friendly
from the same-designer-as-the-iPhone-6 dept.

Found this at HotHardware. From the article:

It's been discovered that some third-party heat sinks can physically damage Intel's new Skylake CPUs, along with the pins in the accompanying motherboard socket. The problem has prompted at least one cooler maker to change the design of its Socket 1151 heat sinks and it wouldn't be surprising if others soon followed suit.

The apparent issue is the substrate Intel used for its Skylake chips. A close-up shot of a Skylake CPU sitting side-by-side with a Broadwell processor shows that the substrate is noticeably thinner on Skylake, and thus prone to bending from the force that some third-party heat sinks exert. It also poses a problem for the tiny pins in the socket area of Skylake motherboards.

Sounds like something to be careful of when building that new rig. Has anyone experienced the issue?

takyon:

Update - 3:08PM: This just in from Intel...

"The design specifications and guidelines for the 6th Gen Intel Core processor using the LGA 1151 socket are unchanged from previous generations and are available for partners and 3rd party manufacturers. Intel can't comment on 3rd party designs or their adherence to the recommended design specifications. For questions about a specific cooling product we must defer to the manufacturer."

And so it would appear this is an OEM 3rd party manufacturer issue, rather than a generalized issue with the processor(s).


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  • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Saturday December 05 2015, @11:41PM

    by Gravis (4596) on Saturday December 05 2015, @11:41PM (#272302)

    The design specifications and guidelines for the 6th Gen Intel Core processor using the LGA 1151 socket are unchanged from previous generations and are available for partners and 3rd party manufacturers.

    this seems like a collision of specifications vs reality. i suspect that the former generation could withstand far more pressure than the current generation of processors. as a result, people designed their heatsinks to work with reality instead of the specification. maybe they saved a few cents or something but as a result, the current generation is being crushed by heatsinks.

    the good news in all this is that AMD chips continue to be rock solid. :)

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 06 2015, @12:44AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 06 2015, @12:44AM (#272314)

    Even solid rock can be crushed. ;-)