With all the recent postings about people using PTM 7950, I’d like to add a little remark from experience and past post but not in recent post. PTM 7950 can be reused multiple times for as long as it is not remove from the die / coldplate.

PTM 7950, as a Phase Change Material, turns solid when cooled after being heat-cycled. This is in direct contrast to its pre-application state where it is extremely hard to even remove from its plastic backings. I have seen videos online of technicians misidentifying PTM7958 on Lenovo Legions as ‘dried out concrete paste’ similar in nature to actual dried out thermal paste. I’ve also seen in my local country’s forum where there was a small discussion if it was actually reusable.

However, unlike actual dried out paste, PTM7950 can be reused by simply picking any of those dried, hard pieces that have spilled over and placing them back onto the die area. Simply tighten as usual and continue using. I have not noticed a difference in temps between reusing and a fresh application after heat-cycling both again. This makes using PTM7950 an even better cost saving imo due to its long service life.

  • GeologistPrimary2637@alien.topOPB
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    10 months ago

    I use PTM 7950 for my laptop, an MSI with a 6600m.

    With stock MSI paste, the delta between edge and hotspot was as large as 14-16C. With PTM, that hotspot drops to just 10C when overclocked, and as low as 6-8C when playing with locked FPS.

    Open my laptop up to clean fans which required moving the entire heatsink, picked PTM from the sides of the die and replaced onto die. Hotspot was still only 10C hotter than edge temps. There was no noticeable drop in performance at all.

    Edge temps at ~88w - 80C Hotspot ~88w - 90C

    Temps may appear high but keep in mind it’s a laptop and it’s overclocked.