Got my fist overheating message today playing Mario galaxy docked 59c? changed the thermal paste today played and whole console feels hot after 20 minutes playing docked. I think the fan in my switch might not be working
While the switch is hot put your face in front of the fan exhaust and try to tell if you can feel air. You can also remove the backplate and see if the fan turns on in demanding games like BoTWGot my fist overheating message today playing Mario galaxy docked 59c? changed the thermal paste today played and whole console feels hot after 20 minutes playing docked. I think the fan in my switch might not be working
Were did you get the thermal pads?After replacing the awful thermal paste application by Nintendo with thermal pads and MX-4, I’ve noticed the fan spinning up less, and the console just feels cooler. My idle temps range from 20-25C, and under load playing Crysis in handheld mode, about 42-48C. Absolutely worth doing and it’s so easy. Just be careful with the screws as they are really susceptible to stripping. I did remove the copper shim.
Were did you get the thermal pads?
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are you supposed to feel air coming out the top if the switch is 49c when docked? i dont feel any hot air comin out the top so i think the fans might be broken in mine
what thickness are the pads did you get?I’m using the Arctic Cooling Thermal pad, cost me about £7 from eBay for a small square. I put them on the RAM shield, and the metal backplate so that it aligns with the heat pipe.
what thickness are the pads did you get?
what thickness are the pads did you get?
I just removed the metal cover on my switch, don't think ram needs cooling at all as it's LPDDR4 used in mobile phones and tablets. If you really want you can use thermal pads, but there's a pretty wide gap between the ram chip and the metal shield. As for thermal paste, arctic mx 4 is good enough, thermal grizzly is completely overkill.Hi All,
I've been looking at videos and threads in regards to how this is done, and everyone has a different method they tend to do. I'd like to try my hand at this, but I've never really done it before. So I had a few questions:
I'm hoping I'm understanding this all correctly. I really appreciate the help!
- Is it really necessary to remove the shielding above the ram? I'd rather not open that up since it looks very delicate. Would putting 0.5mm pads on top be enough?
- The method I see people use often is remove the paste from heat sink and die. Then place the paste on top of the die and spread it using a plastic scraper. Copper plate should be removed to allow for die to make direct contact with heat sink (paste in between). Heat sink is placed on the die and paste is applied along it from where the thermal goop was previously. Pads (0.5mm) are placed on top of the heat shield above ram and then the metal backing is installed. Is this sufficient enough?
- I'm planning on using Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Thermal Grease Paste and Thermal Grizzly Minus Pad 8 High Performance Thermal Pads to get all this done.
How did the Carbonaut pad work out vs thermal paste? Is the fan quieter during graphical demanding games?I personally think cooling the ram will have no benefit since it is not downclocking due to temps. I only do thermal paste and copper shim removal on any switch I do. The few I did for myself and friends of mine use Carbonaut thermal pads for the CPU so they are paste free and will not dry out over time.
Seems fine although I would say it performs the same as paste. I also did one recently where I tested out using a 0.5mm minus8 pad instead and I hit 68c with a 1785 CPU/921 GPU so the carbonaut or should be lower than that.How did the Carbonaut pad work out vs thermal paste? Is the fan quieter during graphical demanding games?
More heat transfer is always better. Heat that has transfered out to the shield is heat that’s not sitting inside your CPU. That’s a good thing.I recently had to replace the fan on my Eristia since it was buzzing like crazy, that meant re-doing the factory thermal job with grizzly kryonaut "grease". The new fan is much quiter and temps are good, but the back of the console can be a bit uncomfortable warm to hold now with standard size joycons, even without overclock. I'm concerned that the thermal conducitivty between the pipe and the IR shield might be too good now, both in terms of handheld comfort and in terms of the IR shield warming other components it shouldn't so much, especially under overclock. Wondering whether there is some less conductive (but still conductive) material I should be using between the heat pipe and IR shield.
Are you sure you got a genuine fan? Maybe the new fan you put in is fake and it's not moving enough air.I recently had to replace the fan on my Eristia since it was buzzing like crazy, that meant re-doing the factory thermal job with grizzly kryonaut "grease". The new fan is much quiter and temps are good, but the back of the console can be a bit uncomfortable warm to hold now with standard size joycons, even without overclock. I'm concerned that the thermal conducitivty between the pipe and the IR shield might be too good now, both in terms of handheld comfort and in terms of the IR shield warming other components it shouldn't so much, especially under overclock. Wondering whether there is some less conductive (but still conductive) material I should be using between the heat pipe and IR shield.
[tc]
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