Ha! Joke's on you, that's an Intel!
(while naturally I can't tell the actual cpu model through the bacon, the motherboard itself has the Intel logo & the 4 holes around the cpu, to fit an Intel heatsink).
To be fair though, *any* cpu will go past boiling point in seconds without any heatsink.
Proof? I have an AMD FX-6300 _overclocked_ to 4.5ghz (that's 1ghz on top of the stock clock speed) and hovers at 40ºC-ish with a room temp of 27ºC.
Whereas (by far not my proudest moment) once I failed to properly fit the crappily-designed Intel heatsink on an i5 3570, and its temp rocketed to 100-ish Celcius by the time the comp booted and I saw the temp info.
That i5 still works, but even now that it's properly cooled, it runs hotter overall, and full load sends it over 80ºC :c
Try with Pentium D
You will burn it to ashes :D
So, what this gif is trying to say is that my potato cpu is actually useful for something other than heat in the winter? :D
Ha! Joke's on you, that's an Intel!
(while naturally I can't tell the actual cpu model through the bacon, the motherboard itself has the Intel logo & the 4 holes around the cpu, to fit an Intel heatsink).
To be fair though, *any* cpu will go past boiling point in seconds without any heatsink.
Proof? I have an AMD FX-6300 _overclocked_ to 4.5ghz (that's 1ghz on top of the stock clock speed) and hovers at 40ºC-ish with a room temp of 27ºC.
Whereas (by far not my proudest moment) once I failed to properly fit the crappily-designed Intel heatsink on an i5 3570, and its temp rocketed to 100-ish Celcius by the time the comp booted and I saw the temp info.
That i5 still works, but even now that it's properly cooled, it runs hotter overall, and full load sends it over 80ºC :c