Both my old Lanparty Ultra-D and my current Gigabyte 965P DS3 have this foam pad between the northbridge heatsink and the actual northbridge PCB. I've only seen this used for northbridge cooling because video cards don't this. Is the foam absolutely needed to protect whatever it's protecting on the northbridge PCB?
I ask this because I currently use a Noctua NC-U6 on my DS3. If you've seen the actual P965 PCB, there are lots of resistors and other stuff on top around the actual core. The NC-U6 came with one of those square foam shims but I had to cut it up and "strategically" place it around the resistors and stuff. Now I'm thinking of getting a P35 board and from the looks of it, the P35 PCB has even more crap around the core. I don't think cutting up some foam shim would do much good here.
Do any of you have northbridge coolers installed without the foam shim? From that I gather, it just relieves some pressure off the core so you don't accidentally crush it or something. But is that really necessary?
I ask this because I currently use a Noctua NC-U6 on my DS3. If you've seen the actual P965 PCB, there are lots of resistors and other stuff on top around the actual core. The NC-U6 came with one of those square foam shims but I had to cut it up and "strategically" place it around the resistors and stuff. Now I'm thinking of getting a P35 board and from the looks of it, the P35 PCB has even more crap around the core. I don't think cutting up some foam shim would do much good here.
Do any of you have northbridge coolers installed without the foam shim? From that I gather, it just relieves some pressure off the core so you don't accidentally crush it or something. But is that really necessary?