Liquid Metall (Thermal Grizzly) | Razer Insider
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Hello,

I would like to know if anyone has had experience with Thermal Grizzly Conductionaut?

is the Vapor Champer made of pure copper? Does the liquid cause metal damage?



Mfg Christoph
You will get a little stain left on the surface which can be lightly sanded down to reapply new thermal when the next time is ready. Yes, it is pure solid copper the part where it is mounted on the die. Doing it right will have a tremendous affect on keeping the temps down.
Thanks for the answer,

did you sell liquid metal yourself?

the layer on the copper does that eat into the material?



Best wishes
Christophus
Hello,

I would like to know if anyone has had experience with Thermal Grizzly Conductionaut?

is the Vapor Champer made of pure copper? Does the liquid cause metal damage?



Mfg Christoph


Suade8880
You will get a little stain left on the surface which can be lightly sanded down to reapply new thermal when the next time is ready. Yes, it is pure solid copper the part where it is mounted on the die. Doing it right will have a tremendous affect on keeping the temps down.


Wait, according other user it’s copper nickel.

/over-a-month-of-liquid-metal-on-2018-razer-blade-15-second-batch-copper-nickle-heatsink.44461/

I wouldn’t recommend LM on Blade laptops though, 5 years experience from various Blade 14/15 normal compound like artic or UC diamond will do the job just find, if you need cooler temperature limit the Turbo Boost is better than LM imo, less risk and easier to do.
Thanks for the quick responses.

I have now used the Kroyonaut paste. How much does Liquid Metal bring in comparison?

I would seal the processor with electrical tape and high temperature silicone for protection.
The heatsink / heatpipe isn't pure copper. It's a laminate / copper coating. Over time the liquid metal "could" eat at away at the thin layer of copper and possibly cause issues. It's an extremely slow process but it's still risky when it's not 100% copper. The liquid metal contains gallium and it's highly corrosive to aluminum and it will make it brittle over time or even completely dissolve it in some cases. Nickel platings are usually ok. It can have an effect on copper if it's a mixed amalgam of copper and some other unknown metal.



I would just use the regular Kryonaut or the new kryonaut extreme. The risks of conductonaut are not really worth the very minimal gains you get on the blade.
Hello,

thank you for the important information.

I only have the Kryonaut not the extremes because it costs 90 euros :)



Who would have the extremes and would sell something to Germany?