Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ratdude747
    Black Sheep
    • Nov 2008
    • 17136
    • USA

    #1

    Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

    Yesterday my fresh (to me) RAM for my gen 1 Imac G5 came in... 2x 1GB of PC3200... however, it's heatsinked super talent gaming ram (got it for cheap, what the hell). I figured the heatsinks/spreaders would help given the G5's piss poor cooling... but..

    It was a VERY tight fit. It barely fit... the heatspreaders are touching eachother and the inner one is also touching the CPU heatsink.

    The system sees and seems to like the RAM... but does the tight fit nullify the cooling effects of the heat spreader? Would I be better off finding a mate for my 1gb PC3200 kingston module that came out instead?

    I'll have to get a picture...
    sigpic

    (Insert witty quote here)
  • larrymoencurly
    Badcaps Veteran
    • Oct 2004
    • 960
    • USA

    #2
    Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

    I thought the low power levels of those RAM chips and their high temperature ratings (85C) made heatsinks completely unnecessary, and heatsinks are put on retail memory modules only for marketing purposes and to cover up the fact that the chips are no-name or overclocked. XbitLabs.com and APHnetworks.com have taken the heatsinks off some modules to reveal that fact, but in the process they sometimes ripped chips or copper traces from the circuit boards.

    Many years ago, I found that about 8 out of 13 Kingston 512MB PC3200 modules had defects, and about 1-2 years ago I got a defect rate of about 30% with Corsair 1GB PC3200 modules.

    Comment

    • ratdude747
      Black Sheep
      • Nov 2008
      • 17136
      • USA

      #3
      Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

      My understanding was that the use of heatsinks was to allow easier overclocking by the end user... the RAM seems to work OK and all. I also got some 512mb OCZ PC3200 sticks as well in the shipment, also heatsinked.

      It should be safe to use, right?
      sigpic

      (Insert witty quote here)

      Comment

      • Pentium4
        CapXon Be Gone
        • Sep 2011
        • 3741
        • USA

        #4
        Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

        I think they're good up to 105C, they seem to idle around 85C...(semi-sarcastic)

        Comment

        • larrymoencurly
          Badcaps Veteran
          • Oct 2004
          • 960
          • USA

          #5
          Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

          Heatsinks have almost nothing to do with overclockability and a lot to do with marketing because it's cheaper to slap on fancy heatsinks and use untested or overclocked chips rather than use branded, guaranteed chips of the advertised speed rating.

          I haven't done much checking, but the highest operating temperature spec I've seen is 95C case temp, if the refresh rate is doubled. Otherwise 85C is the max

          Back in 2006, Corsair tried different heatsinks on a Corsair or OCZ DDR module run at 3.4V and 2-2-2-5 timings in a 68F (probably a misprint for 68C) test chamber, and the best heatsink allowed only a 1.6% faster speed than no heatsink:

          http://www.legitreviews.com/article/299/

          Maximum speeds:

          250 MHz........no heatsink
          253 MHz........OCZ aluminum mesh heatsink
          253 MHz........Corsair stamped aluminum heatsink
          254 MHz........Corsair cast aluminum heatsink
          Last edited by larrymoencurly; 06-27-2013, 10:07 PM.

          Comment

          • ratdude747
            Black Sheep
            • Nov 2008
            • 17136
            • USA

            #6
            Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

            So should I not use the RAM then, if heatsink'd non-RAMBUS = junk?
            sigpic

            (Insert witty quote here)

            Comment

            • shovenose
              Send Doge Memes
              • Aug 2010
              • 6575
              • USA

              #7
              Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

              Originally posted by ratdude747
              So should I not use the RAM then, if heatsink'd non-RAMBUS = junk?
              I don't think that's what's being implied. That RAM is good quality; just because it has heat spreaders doesn't mean it's crap. The heatsinks are more commonly referred to as heat spreaders for a reason - they spread the heat from the little RAM chips to a large surface area. They don't really cool the chips that much more. However, in low airflow situations I doubt they make a huge difference, but they also won't make it worse.
              Last edited by shovenose; 06-27-2013, 11:13 PM.

              Comment

              • ratdude747
                Black Sheep
                • Nov 2008
                • 17136
                • USA

                #8
                Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                FYI. some datasheets/info (if they matter):

                Super talent: https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...c94565e4c5.pdf

                OCZ: http://www.ocztechnology.com/ocz-el-...tinum-eol.html

                So my ulitmate question is: if the heat spreaders are right against eachother and a CPU heatsink like so:



                is the fact i'm using ram with heatspreaders helping or hurting me?
                Attached Files
                sigpic

                (Insert witty quote here)

                Comment

                • shovenose
                  Send Doge Memes
                  • Aug 2010
                  • 6575
                  • USA

                  #9
                  Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                  Originally posted by ratdude747
                  FYI. some datasheets/info (if they matter):

                  Super talent: https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...c94565e4c5.pdf

                  OCZ: http://www.ocztechnology.com/ocz-el-...tinum-eol.html

                  So my ulitmate question is: if the heat spreaders are right against eachother and a CPU heatsink like so:



                  is the fact i'm using ram with heatspreaders helping or hurting me?
                  Helping you.

                  Comment

                  • Elysarian
                    Badcaps Veteran
                    • Mar 2013
                    • 200
                    • United Kingdom

                    #10
                    Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                    Personally the only concern I'd have is whether they're putting pressure/stress on the sockets, I don't see an issue if they're just touching though.

                    Comment

                    • larrymoencurly
                      Badcaps Veteran
                      • Oct 2004
                      • 960
                      • USA

                      #11
                      Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                      Originally posted by ratdude747
                      So should I not use the RAM then, if heatsink'd non-RAMBUS = junk?
                      I say you have to test it like crazy with both MemTest86/86+ and Gold Memory, running each for at least 2 hours, preferrably in at least 2 different types of motherboards. About 10% of the modules I've checked that had heatsinks or unbranded chips were defective, but I've seen only one bad module with prime quality chips and no heatsinks. Actually that module may have been OK, but I refused to run it because it made a crunchy sound when I plugged it in, and it turned out to have solder on 2 of its gold contacts, and a sliver of solder probably fell out of the DIMM socket.

                      Those 1GB Corsair DDR modules I bought were rated 3-3-3-8 on their label but 3-4-4-8 according to their SPDs. I couldn't find any DDR chips as slow as 3-4-4-8 at Micron or Samsung, leading me to suspect they were made from failed 3-3-3-8 chips.

                      Those heatsinks on your modules are making no difference at all. I've tried heating up DDR2 and DDR3 modules during testing by covering them with anti-static foam sheet, but they stayed below 70C. The sockets seem to tolerate the modules having some side pressure on them because I had a DIMM socket that was sensitive to wiggling and would make the computer freeze each time the DIMM was touched, but it turned out a piece of lint was stuck to one of the socket pins, and after removing it I could wiggle the module quite a bit without causing MemTest86 to report errors.
                      Last edited by larrymoencurly; 06-29-2013, 03:29 AM.

                      Comment

                      • ratdude747
                        Black Sheep
                        • Nov 2008
                        • 17136
                        • USA

                        #12
                        Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                        ^ Yeah, I wish I had the time to do that... I could technically though. PO of the modules reported no issues, and I'm somewhat certain he memtested them in at least one motherboard.
                        sigpic

                        (Insert witty quote here)

                        Comment

                        • shovenose
                          Send Doge Memes
                          • Aug 2010
                          • 6575
                          • USA

                          #13
                          Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                          Originally posted by ratdude747
                          ^ Yeah, I wish I had the time to do that... I could technically though. PO of the modules reported no issues, and I'm somewhat certain he memtested them in at least one motherboard.
                          Confirmed., no errors in a weird DFI LGA775 Pentium4 board. It's the OCZ that's iffy.
                          Last edited by shovenose; 06-29-2013, 06:19 PM.

                          Comment

                          • kaboom
                            "Oh, Grouchy!"
                            • Jan 2011
                            • 2507
                            • USA

                            #14
                            Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                            Originally posted by shovenose
                            It's the OCZ that's iffy.
                            No surprise there!


                            As for the heatspreaders. They're an ugly reminder of the RAMBUS days. RDRAM could concentrate all heat output onto a single chip, and also had a habit of running hot.

                            Now, stupid "GAM3R" heatsinked RAM SPDs bullshit settings to push things too far. 2.1V vs 1.8V, and timings that are too tight, sometimes (usually?) using reject chips.

                            No wonder that current heatsinked RAM has become suspect...

                            It's like ASUS and newegg advertising that a given board will run at 2166(OC). More bullshit! All other boards with the same chipset don't go that high, and the chipset datasheets don't specify it either!

                            ASUS/AS(C)ROCK and antec, whatta perfect match:
                            2166(OC)
                            1666(OC)
                            1333
                            1066
                            800


                            Originally posted by larrymoencurly
                            Those 1GB Corsair DDR modules I bought were rated 3-3-3-8 on their label but 3-4-4-8 according to their SPDs. I couldn't find any DDR chips as slow as 3-4-4-8 at Micron or Samsung, leading me to suspect they were made from failed 3-3-3-8 chips.
                            And probably run higher than spec voltage, too.
                            Even more bullshit!

                            That's the problem- these "Brand Name" companies, using, um, their brand recognition, to leverage potential buyers...
                            The same thing antec did a few years ago...
                            "pokemon go... to hell!"

                            EOL it...
                            Originally posted by shango066
                            All style and no substance.
                            Originally posted by smashstuff30
                            guilty,guilty,guilty,guilty!
                            guilty of being cheap-made!

                            Comment

                            • shovenose
                              Send Doge Memes
                              • Aug 2010
                              • 6575
                              • USA

                              #15
                              Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                              And that's why I like MSI motherboards... if only they made RAM

                              Comment

                              • RJARRRPCGP
                                Badcaps Legend
                                • Jul 2004
                                • 6301
                                • USA

                                #16
                                Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                                Originally posted by larrymoencurly
                                Those 1GB Corsair DDR modules I bought were rated 3-3-3-8 on their label but 3-4-4-8 according to their SPDs.
                                Looks like it's relabelled PC2700. Likely intended to be factory-OC'ed PC2700.
                                ASRock B550 PG Velocita

                                Ryzen 9 "Vermeer" 5900X

                                32 GB G.Skill RipJaws V F4-3200C16D-32GVR

                                Arc A770 16 GB

                                eVGA Supernova G3 750W

                                Western Digital Black SN850 1TB NVMe SSD

                                Alienware AW3423DWF OLED




                                "¡Me encanta "Me Encanta o Enlistarlo con Hilary Farr!" -Mí mismo

                                "There's nothing more unattractive than a chick smoking a cigarette" -Topcat

                                "Today's lesson in pissivity comes in the form of a ziplock baggie full of GPU extension brackets & hardware that for the last ~3 years have been on my bench, always in my way, getting moved around constantly....and yesterday I found myself in need of them....and the bastards are now nowhere to be found! Motherfracker!!" -Topcat

                                "did I see a chair fly? I think I did! Time for popcorn!" -ratdude747

                                Comment

                                • Gordon01
                                  Member
                                  • Aug 2011
                                  • 33
                                  • Russia

                                  #17
                                  Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                                  Originally posted by ratdude747
                                  is the fact i'm using ram with heatspreaders helping or hurting me?
                                  Do nothing, I think)

                                  Comment

                                  • stj
                                    Great Sage 齊天大聖
                                    • Dec 2009
                                    • 30919
                                    • Albion

                                    #18
                                    Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                                    do NOT remove the heatsinks,

                                    i did that to a couple of old dimms and found that they used DIY-ON-BOARD technology under the sink with no chip packages!

                                    Comment

                                    • Ed Herdman
                                      Member
                                      • Apr 2014
                                      • 31
                                      • USA

                                      #19
                                      Re: Cramming Heatsinked RAM into an Imac g5

                                      I'd write Super Talent asking them if it's okay to remove the heatsinks.

                                      It's a totally different machine than a G5, but I've got a large tower in which I placed a huge Noctua heatsink over my CPU. Unfortunately the heatsink is so big that is partially overhangs two of the RAM slots, and I couldn't place two of my RAM modules in with the heatsinks on. I wrote the manufacturer for guidance and they said it was fine. I haven't been overclocking the RAM or running hot temps inside the case, though, so it might work out totally different inside a G5.

                                      However, this was a special heatsink type, which slides onto the top of the module and is held in place by tiny Philips screws. Obviously, if the heatsinks are glued on to the sides of the RAM chips, and the heatsinks comes off in long pieces, I would be wary of doing this. You might be able to get away with cutting down the heatsinks along their tops though.

                                      Comment

                                      Related Topics

                                      Collapse

                                      • ryogadan78
                                        iMac A1418 - No LED, no power after overvoltage on Ethernet port
                                        by ryogadan78
                                        Hi guys, I need your help again.
                                        I have this iMac from a customer that shut down during a storm along with all the other devices in the house. In particular, the router, connected via Ethernet to the iMac, caught fire.
                                        When I removed the screen from the iMac to check the status of the LEDs, I noticed that none of them were lit. I had a perfectly compatible and working power supply, so I tried it right away, but the problem remained the same (no LEDs). With the thermal camera, I noticed only a slight warming (32 degrees) of the NCP1605BG chip on the power supply. The rest was completely...
                                        06-10-2025, 03:49 AM
                                      • Stephen
                                        iMac M1 DFU restore issue
                                        by Stephen
                                        iMac turns on no drops no cracks, tried to DFU Restore the iMac, logo turns on great! however iMac turns itself off and then restarts to the (!) icon and won't post the restore. Tried thunderbolt 3 cable, tried regular USB C cable and nothing.

                                        this is the message it gives me with the error

                                        Unexpected device state 'DFU' expected 'RestoreOS' (Probably forced into DFU mode externally) [com.apple.MobileDevice.MobileRestore – 0xFAE (4014)].


                                        Any thoughts what this could be? I will open it up and repair it but I am not 100% sure since this iMac doesn't...
                                        03-07-2025, 12:19 PM
                                      • Stephen
                                        iMac 27” 2020 Boot issue
                                        by Stephen
                                        Customer came in for data recovery, came to find out data is soldered on to this iMac (learn something new everyday) this is a 2020 T2 iMac so I was surprised because the iMac Pro has a T2 chip and it isn’t soldered on. Anyways, the iMac boots to Apple logo and then restarts, before it turns off you hear a quarter fan spin then it repeats itself. I decided to do a DFU revive to restore any hardware firmware issues and it was successful in reviving the device however the issue persists in boot looping. It shows the Apple logo for like 40 seconds then turns off and fan spin rinse repeat. I...
                                        08-16-2024, 09:32 AM
                                      • tommy97
                                        iMac Pro 2017 A1862 SSD Upgrade & Recovery mode
                                        by tommy97
                                        Hi,

                                        we've got iMac Pro 2017 which having a problem with SSD, iMac come with 2 SSD's 1TB, it was having a problem with the SSD so we get the replacement, installed in and iMac is stuck in recovery mode, tried to restore it & revive, nothing worked - error 4010. After installing old drives now we're having the same problem that the device is in recovery mode. Previously after swap of the SSD iMac worked on the old SSD however after attempt of revive on the new SSD machine stuck in recovery mode, I can go to DFU but the same result with error 4010.

                                        Any ideas what might've...
                                        04-20-2024, 04:48 AM
                                      • howardc64
                                        A1312 (27” iMac 2009-2011) A1407 (Thunderbolt Display) A1316 (Cinema Display) Display Black Screen Repair
                                        by howardc64
                                        Problem

                                        This is an LG edge LED lit LCD Display. The LEDs are on the bottom edge of the display. There are 2 bars (left and right) Each bar has many LEDs and a 6 pin connector. Each pin drive several LEDs thus is the highest current flow / heat junction. The weak lead free solder gradually fails with thermal expansion/contraction cycling and increases resistance. PSU will compensate up to a point, then when the current is too high, PSU just shut down the backlight causing a dark display. I have even seen one which the connector just fell off as solder points became completely detached....
                                        08-04-2024, 10:36 PM
                                      • Loading...
                                      • No more items.
                                      Working...