Buy AMeCh SGT-4 Here: amzn.to/3Cjd2Vr I love an underdog story, and totally expected this paste to be some hot garbage that I would have the contractual pleasure of roasting. But after seeing it's performance, I'm grateful that I was able to help out a small company that has a genuinely competitive product in a confusing market. I get emails and DM's all the time from subscribers complaining about how difficult it was for them to apply PTM7950, or looking for an alternative due to how expensive it is, and this paste checked both boxes. I'm willing to bet once more people catch on to SGT-4, you'll start seeing competitors drop their prices.
1:48 It's not Arctic Silver, these are 2 different companies. Arctic Silver is a california/US based company, Arctic (Cooling, they dropped the Cooling part of the name a couple years ago) is Swiss/German. The famous Arctic Silver 5 is not made by Arctic who makes MX-4 and MX-6, and many air and liquid coolers.
Wow. So I have a tube of the worst thermal paste shown in this test at home. I have some MX4 that I bought a while back because I needed something to put onto my old PC's CPU instead of the crusty stuff that was on there since forever. If I ever buy thermal paste again (my MX4 tube is still about two thirds full) I'll probably take a look at AMeCh.
@ MX-4 is still a good thermal paste, it has very good longeivity, in the tube and in the device, and the consistency makes it easy to work with. It's not the straight up best if you're into overclocking, but for most regular use cases it's good enough. I use it for older devices or devices of friends and family that I just don't want to have to redo for a long time. Also in my experience, MX-4 (maybe due to the consistency) takes a couple days to fully settle, so it might improve from what is shown in the video. I repasted my old laptop just last weekend with MX-4, and right afterwards, it seemed louder than normal, but now it's back to what it was before.
Back in 1994 I was creating an important work document on a Pentium II and it kept overheating and shutting down before I could get my files off of it. There was no tech shops near by, so I used White Glue as a compound and it worked for about 3.5 months before it started overheating again, lol
Long-term testing will say everything. I can confirm from my personal experience with Arctic MX-4, which I’ve used for 6 years on my old CPU. The temperatures were just 2°C higher than when I first applied it (possibly due to changes in ambient temperature, as I’m not sure how hot it was when I tested it 6 years ago). When I updated my system 2 months ago, the paste still looked the same as it did in the tube, no visual or tactile changes after 6 years of daily use. Of course, I reused the old MX-4 tube for my new CPU. It’s 6 years old, but so far, it’s working fantastically on my Ryzen 7 9700X with the same cooler I used on my old CPU, a Noctua NH-D14, which is now around 10 years old. If this old MX-4 stops working properly, I would definitely give AMeCh product a try.
I love your testing. I think the only real issue is some thermal paste sets better after days of use and multiple on/off sessions, but I realize that's difficult to test. Well done.
I was going to say that as well. I think a "better" test (totally subjective) is to do a 24 hour burn-in per paste to give it time to set. Obviously, that's too much time for your time table, but it might yield slightly different results. Regardless - always nice to see other entries into the field. Thermal paste offerings have become a bit cluttered as of late and it's getting harder to know what is what year over year. I agree that some of my favorites (Kryonaut and MX-6) definitely have the added cost. It was easier in the older days when most of us used Arctic Silver 5 and did just fine - but this has become a constantly moving target so new ideas are always welcome.
I have some questions: What brand of cotton ball did you use? Do we know the thread count? Was the isopropyl alcohol locally sourced, open range, and taste tested? How much newtonian pressure was applied with the spatula? Was each thermal paste stored in a drawer and forgotten for 6 months to emulate the true consumer buying experience?
Glad i saw this before i went and bought just any paste, happy to have the greatest technician thats ever lived helping us with some of the more random but useful statistics
I haven't been able to get my hands on SP, but I would assume it's just as good as the pads, but the cost is still way up there vs SGT-4 for not much gain.
I have the SP paste (It needs special drying steps) and the sheets when authentic work better (Most of the PTM7950 sold online are relabeled counterfeits but the PCM8500 sold as PTM7950 works good as well, PCM5000 has on one side a very thin film)
What a thorough review! We buy Arctic Silver 5 and an off-brand (for diagnosing anything but temps) in bulk, but this'll be a good brand to keep in mind when our customers ask what thermal paste they should get... because most people don't need to buy 40 grams at a time. LOL
Dude you absolutely have to visit Yongsan electronics market in Seoul one day. Building after building loaded with every kind of electronics vendor you can imagine. Maybe you can visit their HQ
@@SalemTechsperts however amazing it looks in the pictures, it's not amazing enough. It's like the biggest farmers market you've ever seen but with mobos and CPU coolers instead of kale
I usually work on old prebuilds companies throw away for scrap (currently it's mostly 3rd/4th Gen Intel, but slowly getting to the newer Systems with DDR4), meaning most CPUs are low powered, not overclockable and have run on stock thermal paste for 4-8+ years. For those, I usually use HY510, which I bought in bulk to get down to 1,47€ per 30g (0,049€/g or 0,196€ for 4g). It's to get the job done and lasts reasonably well, but it's not a paste you'd use (other than for fitting tests) on a System where you've paid for a better cooler etc. I assume it is similar if not the same as you'd see used in prebuild PCs, I guess it would be at 60° during a stress test when MX-4 is at 56, but the margin during normal use would be smaller. Also, I'd assume there's a decent chance for random amazon sellers to send you this paste instead of a chinese one that tested better at a higher price. PS: The PTM7950 is a Phase Change paste, if you tested it the same way as you did the others, it's going to perform worse than it should, because it wants multiple cycles to burn in, while the others are less demanding in that regard. Phase Change pastes also can yield differnt results based on the coolers, some don't work as well with certain base plates.
Still have a tube of tried and true Arctic Silver 5 and a new tube of Arctic MX-6 that I strictly use for desktop CPU's. I recently ordered Thermal Grizzly KryoSheets and used them for the CPU and GPU of my laptop since it's direct die snd I got tired of the pump out effect. They actually work great. No more pump out or thermal throttling after a few months. It really is a set and forget type product. This stuff looks promising for a budget paste!
Just picked some up, I've been using coolercube as my budget paste for repasting coolers on refurbs at work and this is actually a good bit cheaper, I've tested the coolercube against thermal grizzly and kpx so based off that data and yours this stuff should perform better than what I have been using for a good bit cheaper
reddit community introduced me to ptm 7950 a year back and I have used that for everything since. such a great product especially as you said for laptops and gpus and long term use
Im impressed by this budget paste, and loved all the information given about the paste and the process for testing it. But i have bought two KPX large syringes, i might have gotten a bit excited when i was building my first pc. So now i have enough thermalpaste to repaste my computers and all my friends computers xD
In laptop it is more important to minimalize pump-out effect on exposed silicon die, that is why I will use only genuine PTM on my notebook. Every grease paste is pumped out from my 55W CPU in 2 weeks, on GPU holds for 1 month. There is nothing better IMHO
Hello! This is a very excellent and transparent testing and review. I am considering this paste now once it becomes available in our country. Also, have you tried the GD thermal pastes? They ship in 30g tubes and have different varieties of different consistencies. Maybe it could lead you to a video of testing different varieties of thermal interfaces and what to recommend to DIY people as well as fellow tech people as well. Thanks and more power to the greatest technician that's ever lived!
I clicked past this earlier as I didn't recognize the name. Though if it continues to look promising in the future i'll probably check it the next time everything needs to be repasted! Though I would have loved to see it against Noctua's pastes but it's hard to underscore just how well it performed especially at that price.
Damn, I just fixed a laptop for a friend and I forgot to replace the thermal paste. Oh well, when I have to inevitably upgrade it I’ll clean it up. You sucked me into buying it.
As a Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme victim, i'll be buying this the next time I need paste. Which is really soon because my 2 gram tube probably has enough for something very small, if that.
I know the company was sponsoring this video, but I'd be very interested in a long-term test of this. The reason we see PTM7950 recommended so often is due to its long life properties. Maybe put it on your Geekom PC with the i9?
Good timing though. I was going to buy another mx6 tonight and saw an ad of Amech. Thought this is some worthless stuff. But now considering to buy one😂
Great info! Glad to see more options available in the market. For thermal resistance, how different are those numbers realistically? The graph, if zoomed out from 0 to 0.3, the bars are more comparable than showing from 0.27 to 0.3. I would argue that AMECH has comparable performance to all the popular brands available, but it certainly has an advantage in the cost per gram category
So check this out, I have one that is even better in my opinion, only paste I use after testing EVERYTHING. TC-P1800 w/ thermal conductivity rating of >18 W/m-k. So, a 5-gram tube of this is 12-20 bucks depending on where you pick it up at. It is thick as the AMech but I have found that the thicker IF made right seems to perform better than paste that is more fluid. I have been testing it a gaming rig I built a little over year ago using this paste. The build is a AM4 build using the 5800 X3D, paired with a 6950 XT. Both are blocked the CPU is using a BARROW block and the GPU is using Alpha-Cool's Server block series, which is the only blocks I use on my builds, they have the best cooling in my experience, but I digress as J would say. For the loop I have Alpha-Cool 1x120mm and an Alpha-Cool 1x240x40mm Rad, pump is a BARROW mini rez-pump combo. Now with this paste compared to others with this build is the 6950 XT overclocked to a stable 2600+ and mem at 2331 MHz and the 5800 X3D running at 4.5 MHz respectively will never get about 70c on the hotspot, the CPU 65-70c! All the other paste which even includes a version of Thermal Grizzley that I even ran through the rig did not give me them temps, it placed second off by 2-3c on average, but all the others averaged anywhere from, including Grizzley 72-83c. I have tried to let people know but they say "oh you are just a pusher" lol. Far from it. I am a PC enthusiast and want everyone to enjoy what I have learned through my experiences, kwm. PC's being an expensive lifestyle lol for real sometimes it's nice to find these little companies in the industry, with them producing something unique for us an affordable price unlike most companies who are just out for themselves. AMech is obviously for us, the consumer and that is commendable. Anyway, check it out if you get a chance if not its cool just wanted to shout out. Take it easy. Drew from BeanieBro's. Peace.
PTM or a Thermal Grizzly KryoSheet for laptop CPU/GPU since they're direct die. I personally strictly use KryoSheets in my own stuff and they're awesome.
I'm curious how it lasts over time? I saw a review that said it used cheap silicone oil that offgassed at a lower temperature..... or something like that. I don't know anything about thermal paste but I am curious what causes some brands to crack and dry up rather quickly.
I tried this product when it came out here in Italy. Really liked the product but the price here is 7.65€ and the mx4 is 4.73€ for the same 4g. The MX6 is around 9€. I'm not sure what i'll buy next!
But what if they specifically sent you a better/different thermal product inside the tube. A lot of dishonest companies target youtubers using those tactics. Then when all of us peasants buy and try said product, our experience is different. So to me, this could be flawed unless you randomly buy one from them and do the test again
I'd love for you to provide an example of that actually taking place. No established company worth a shit would risk potential bankruptcy due to lawsuits, and damage of reputation for a single good review. It's in the contract that purposely misleading or taking false actions would result in hefty financial damages. Not to mention how expensive it would be for them to buy, package, and ship me 100 sealed tubes of somebody else's paste.
@@SalemTechspertswhile that is true, as a viewer, It would give me peace of mind if you had purchased from Amazon. Although I know you can always replace the amazon product with the shared sample, It's easier to trust you than coorporations.
It's Prime95 or go home. lol Jokes aside, there's a lot of good thermal greases and cheap. Brazil has some almost as good as Kryonaut that costs like 5 USD. You could try Iceberg Cooling thermal paste.
0:57 "[...] They are paying me for the Video, not for the conclusion." If you are paid to make a Video about anything, then everything regarding that Video has been paid for. And any opinion about a company or product will be altered, be it consciously or unconsciously, by receiving money from them. Please make it clear that a sponsored video is not a review or unbiased test. Especially since this is a very widespread misconception on the internet. If something is not independent, it can't be unbiased. If you didn't receive money from them, you probably wouldn't have made this test, and they might not even have been included in the test. Otherwise, great video!
For a brief moment, I forgot what you were talking about in reference to grams. Anyway, I've got 2 tubes of AMeCh on my bench and its worked fine when I refurbish Dell workstations. My go to however is Noctua NT-H1, I've used it for years without issue.
Buy AMeCh SGT-4 Here: amzn.to/3Cjd2Vr
I love an underdog story, and totally expected this paste to be some hot garbage that I would have the contractual pleasure of roasting. But after seeing it's performance, I'm grateful that I was able to help out a small company that has a genuinely competitive product in a confusing market.
I get emails and DM's all the time from subscribers complaining about how difficult it was for them to apply PTM7950, or looking for an alternative due to how expensive it is, and this paste checked both boxes. I'm willing to bet once more people catch on to SGT-4, you'll start seeing competitors drop their prices.
Hi Salem, when your next short comes up, May you please do “the greatest technician that’s ever lived” in the funny mic effect? Thanks.
Second
@@SalemTechsperts The Greatest Thermal Paste that's ever Lived
Instruction unclear, Honey button activated.
Thank you for this informational video. I bought it because of this review. I was looking for good thermal paste.
I thought this was a taste test
lol
It’s not??
It is, wym?
@@CommanderD1204 yummy thermal paste, i imagine it would be concrete flavored soft serve
No, shit.
The Greatest Thermal Paste thats ever Lived
Fr😂😂😂😂
😂
1:48 It's not Arctic Silver, these are 2 different companies. Arctic Silver is a california/US based company, Arctic (Cooling, they dropped the Cooling part of the name a couple years ago) is Swiss/German. The famous Arctic Silver 5 is not made by Arctic who makes MX-4 and MX-6, and many air and liquid coolers.
Shit, good catch
Wow. So I have a tube of the worst thermal paste shown in this test at home. I have some MX4 that I bought a while back because I needed something to put onto my old PC's CPU instead of the crusty stuff that was on there since forever.
If I ever buy thermal paste again (my MX4 tube is still about two thirds full) I'll probably take a look at AMeCh.
@ MX-4 is still a good thermal paste, it has very good longeivity, in the tube and in the device, and the consistency makes it easy to work with. It's not the straight up best if you're into overclocking, but for most regular use cases it's good enough. I use it for older devices or devices of friends and family that I just don't want to have to redo for a long time.
Also in my experience, MX-4 (maybe due to the consistency) takes a couple days to fully settle, so it might improve from what is shown in the video. I repasted my old laptop just last weekend with MX-4, and right afterwards, it seemed louder than normal, but now it's back to what it was before.
The greatest thermal paste thats ever lived is the one that comes from the greatest technician that’s ever lived
-Sun tzu
Time to find what other TH-camrs think, without paid advert on the product
Cool pfp bro
Back in 1994 I was creating an important work document on a Pentium II and it kept overheating and shutting down before I could get my files off of it. There was no tech shops near by, so I used White Glue as a compound and it worked for about 3.5 months before it started overheating again, lol
Pentium II, that's a name I haven't heard in a long time...
Noooooiceee the kind of paste i need for my dild.....i mean my computer 👍
Thank you Salem tech!
It's important to have good thermal management for your sensitive components, to make sure they keep operating at their peak performance!
Important when viewing 4k hardcore po...kemon contents 👍
Long-term testing will say everything. I can confirm from my personal experience with Arctic MX-4, which I’ve used for 6 years on my old CPU. The temperatures were just 2°C higher than when I first applied it (possibly due to changes in ambient temperature, as I’m not sure how hot it was when I tested it 6 years ago). When I updated my system 2 months ago, the paste still looked the same as it did in the tube, no visual or tactile changes after 6 years of daily use. Of course, I reused the old MX-4 tube for my new CPU. It’s 6 years old, but so far, it’s working fantastically on my Ryzen 7 9700X with the same cooler I used on my old CPU, a Noctua NH-D14, which is now around 10 years old. If this old MX-4 stops working properly, I would definitely give AMeCh product a try.
You need to change your paste more often what in the world
I love your testing. I think the only real issue is some thermal paste sets better after days of use and multiple on/off sessions, but I realize that's difficult to test. Well done.
I was going to say that as well. I think a "better" test (totally subjective) is to do a 24 hour burn-in per paste to give it time to set. Obviously, that's too much time for your time table, but it might yield slightly different results.
Regardless - always nice to see other entries into the field. Thermal paste offerings have become a bit cluttered as of late and it's getting harder to know what is what year over year. I agree that some of my favorites (Kryonaut and MX-6) definitely have the added cost. It was easier in the older days when most of us used Arctic Silver 5 and did just fine - but this has become a constantly moving target so new ideas are always welcome.
The value is INCREDIBLE. 20g tube costs 15$ plus shipping. After reading their response from your link I'm sold.
I have some questions:
What brand of cotton ball did you use? Do we know the thread count?
Was the isopropyl alcohol locally sourced, open range, and taste tested?
How much newtonian pressure was applied with the spatula?
Was each thermal paste stored in a drawer and forgotten for 6 months to emulate the true consumer buying experience?
And how much wood could a woodchuck chuck from The Who’s damaged equipment yard sale? 😂
I guess you meant to say 6 years. In 6 months the paint isn't even dry yet
Glad i saw this before i went and bought just any paste, happy to have the greatest technician thats ever lived helping us with some of the more random but useful statistics
I just brought my first thermal paste last night thanks for the perfect upload
Thanks for the review. What about the Honeywell PTM7950-SP? It's the one they ship in a tube, not sheets.
I haven't been able to get my hands on SP, but I would assume it's just as good as the pads, but the cost is still way up there vs SGT-4 for not much gain.
I have the SP paste (It needs special drying steps) and the sheets when authentic work better (Most of the PTM7950 sold online are relabeled counterfeits but the PCM8500 sold as PTM7950 works good as well, PCM5000 has on one side a very thin film)
from what I've seen online, it requires a curing process, so the sheets version is still easier to use
The greatest thermal paste review that 's ever lived.
The Greatest Thermal Paste Review that's ever Lived
What a thorough review! We buy Arctic Silver 5 and an off-brand (for diagnosing anything but temps) in bulk, but this'll be a good brand to keep in mind when our customers ask what thermal paste they should get... because most people don't need to buy 40 grams at a time. LOL
Finally, I can find and buy the perfect paste for my laptop to keep my GTX 950M and i7-6700 happi!!! :D
Interesting and good luck to the company as a competitor in the thermal paste space.
Dude you absolutely have to visit Yongsan electronics market in Seoul one day. Building after building loaded with every kind of electronics vendor you can imagine. Maybe you can visit their HQ
This would be amazing
@@SalemTechsperts however amazing it looks in the pictures, it's not amazing enough. It's like the biggest farmers market you've ever seen but with mobos and CPU coolers instead of kale
I would definitely rather eat thermal paste than kale
76°F ambient in the middle of winter, Subway be wilin'.
I usually work on old prebuilds companies throw away for scrap (currently it's mostly 3rd/4th Gen Intel, but slowly getting to the newer Systems with DDR4), meaning most CPUs are low powered, not overclockable and have run on stock thermal paste for 4-8+ years.
For those, I usually use HY510, which I bought in bulk to get down to 1,47€ per 30g (0,049€/g or 0,196€ for 4g).
It's to get the job done and lasts reasonably well, but it's not a paste you'd use (other than for fitting tests) on a System where you've paid for a better cooler etc.
I assume it is similar if not the same as you'd see used in prebuild PCs, I guess it would be at 60° during a stress test when MX-4 is at 56, but the margin during normal use would be smaller.
Also, I'd assume there's a decent chance for random amazon sellers to send you this paste instead of a chinese one that tested better at a higher price.
PS: The PTM7950 is a Phase Change paste, if you tested it the same way as you did the others, it's going to perform worse than it should, because it wants multiple cycles to burn in, while the others are less demanding in that regard. Phase Change pastes also can yield differnt results based on the coolers, some don't work as well with certain base plates.
Still have a tube of tried and true Arctic Silver 5 and a new tube of Arctic MX-6 that I strictly use for desktop CPU's. I recently ordered Thermal Grizzly KryoSheets and used them for the CPU and GPU of my laptop since it's direct die snd I got tired of the pump out effect. They actually work great. No more pump out or thermal throttling after a few months. It really is a set and forget type product. This stuff looks promising for a budget paste!
Just picked some up, I've been using coolercube as my budget paste for repasting coolers on refurbs at work and this is actually a good bit cheaper, I've tested the coolercube against thermal grizzly and kpx so based off that data and yours this stuff should perform better than what I have been using for a good bit cheaper
For some reason, it reminded me of Zohan's adventures with hummus. One point: burn-in period of this thermal paste wasn't tested.
you are truly the greatest technician who ever lived👍
reddit community introduced me to ptm 7950 a year back and I have used that for everything since. such a great product especially as you said for laptops and gpus and long term use
Im impressed by this budget paste, and loved all the information given about the paste and the process for testing it.
But i have bought two KPX large syringes, i might have gotten a bit excited when i was building my first pc.
So now i have enough thermalpaste to repaste my computers and all my friends computers xD
In laptop it is more important to minimalize pump-out effect on exposed silicon die, that is why I will use only genuine PTM on my notebook. Every grease paste is pumped out from my 55W CPU in 2 weeks, on GPU holds for 1 month. There is nothing better IMHO
MUM THE GREATEST TECHNICIAN THATS EVER LIVED POSTED
recommended by the Greatest Technician Ever Lived !!!! Shout out to Lupen Too. Salam from Indonesia
The greatest technician my mom ever met
The best thermal paste that's ever lived
Thank you man, now i am a gooch collector too thanks to you
Paste time! Just at the right moment. I was already considering switching to Graphite Pads.
Hello! This is a very excellent and transparent testing and review. I am considering this paste now once it becomes available in our country. Also, have you tried the GD thermal pastes? They ship in 30g tubes and have different varieties of different consistencies. Maybe it could lead you to a video of testing different varieties of thermal interfaces and what to recommend to DIY people as well as fellow tech people as well. Thanks and more power to the greatest technician that's ever lived!
Yeah, I will probably buy one before I start my new pc build. I thought my old tube of MX 4 was fine so far.
I clicked past this earlier as I didn't recognize the name. Though if it continues to look promising in the future i'll probably check it the next time everything needs to be repasted! Though I would have loved to see it against Noctua's pastes but it's hard to underscore just how well it performed especially at that price.
Damn, I just fixed a laptop for a friend and I forgot to replace the thermal paste. Oh well, when I have to inevitably upgrade it I’ll clean it up. You sucked me into buying it.
As a Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme victim, i'll be buying this the next time I need paste. Which is really soon because my 2 gram tube probably has enough for something very small, if that.
I know the company was sponsoring this video, but I'd be very interested in a long-term test of this. The reason we see PTM7950 recommended so often is due to its long life properties. Maybe put it on your Geekom PC with the i9?
Good timing though. I was going to buy another mx6 tonight and saw an ad of Amech. Thought this is some worthless stuff. But now considering to buy one😂
The greatest paste that has ever been tasted
Very cool getting to see your results! Has me vaguely curious how it'd hold up to Noctua NT-H2 that I've got in my rig right now.
Great info! Glad to see more options available in the market.
For thermal resistance, how different are those numbers realistically? The graph, if zoomed out from 0 to 0.3, the bars are more comparable than showing from 0.27 to 0.3. I would argue that AMECH has comparable performance to all the popular brands available, but it certainly has an advantage in the cost per gram category
Every watt counts, but the cost is the biggest thing that sets it apart, hence my conclusion that it’s the best budget thermal paste on the market.
Which one brightens my teeth?
So check this out, I have one that is even better in my opinion, only paste I use after testing EVERYTHING. TC-P1800 w/ thermal conductivity rating of >18 W/m-k. So, a 5-gram tube of this is 12-20 bucks depending on where you pick it up at. It is thick as the AMech but I have found that the thicker IF made right seems to perform better than paste that is more fluid. I have been testing it a gaming rig I built a little over year ago using this paste. The build is a AM4 build using the 5800 X3D, paired with a 6950 XT. Both are blocked the CPU is using a BARROW block and the GPU is using Alpha-Cool's Server block series, which is the only blocks I use on my builds, they have the best cooling in my experience, but I digress as J would say. For the loop I have Alpha-Cool 1x120mm and an Alpha-Cool 1x240x40mm Rad, pump is a BARROW mini rez-pump combo. Now with this paste compared to others with this build is the 6950 XT overclocked to a stable 2600+ and mem at 2331 MHz and the 5800 X3D running at 4.5 MHz respectively will never get about 70c on the hotspot, the CPU 65-70c! All the other paste which even includes a version of Thermal Grizzley that I even ran through the rig did not give me them temps, it placed second off by 2-3c on average, but all the others averaged anywhere from, including Grizzley 72-83c. I have tried to let people know but they say "oh you are just a pusher" lol. Far from it. I am a PC enthusiast and want everyone to enjoy what I have learned through my experiences, kwm. PC's being an expensive lifestyle lol for real sometimes it's nice to find these little companies in the industry, with them producing something unique for us an affordable price unlike most companies who are just out for themselves. AMech is obviously for us, the consumer and that is commendable. Anyway, check it out if you get a chance if not its cool just wanted to shout out. Take it easy. Drew from BeanieBro's. Peace.
Well i might consider these guys for my next build! That won't be for auite a while though.
Just bought mx6 but I’d love to give this a try eventually if it stands the test of time
thx, just the video i need. 😁
been looking for good thermal paste or pad
So, which is better, a thermal paste or PTM, on a gaming laptop? Thanks ~ 😊
PTM or a Thermal Grizzly KryoSheet for laptop CPU/GPU since they're direct die. I personally strictly use KryoSheets in my own stuff and they're awesome.
@HectorQuien I see. Thanks bro ~ 😎🍻
Depending on how much they cost in my region if they're available. I'll strongly consider them for my first build.
it would have been good to show the ghz/mhz numbers, as the cpu may have different boosting due to thermal headroom
I'm buying some because I need to change my AIO anyway. Thanks!
PTM7950 does take time to get thermal benefits, as for their packaging I don't what it looks like as long as its cheap and works great.
I wonder if there is a possibility of AMech opening up a Aliexpress store and maybe a Lazada/Shopee store to allow the rest of Asia to get this paste?
The greatest thermal paste that ever lived.
You should have gone to school for Engineering 😂😂😂 very nice experiment and testing protocols and very nice methodology used.
Great video 🎉
I'll have to give them a shot. can't go wrong for $6
I'm curious how it lasts over time?
I saw a review that said it used cheap silicone oil that offgassed at a lower temperature..... or something like that.
I don't know anything about thermal paste but I am curious what causes some brands to crack and dry up rather quickly.
I specifically mentioned that in my questions, that’s why I included their reply
I tried this product when it came out here in Italy. Really liked the product but the price here is 7.65€ and the mx4 is 4.73€ for the same 4g. The MX6 is around 9€. I'm not sure what i'll buy next!
this is a snapshot about the greatest technician that ever lived with the greatest pc that ever lived need the greatest thermal paste that ever lived😅
But what if they specifically sent you a better/different thermal product inside the tube. A lot of dishonest companies target youtubers using those tactics. Then when all of us peasants buy and try said product, our experience is different. So to me, this could be flawed unless you randomly buy one from them and do the test again
I'd love for you to provide an example of that actually taking place. No established company worth a shit would risk potential bankruptcy due to lawsuits, and damage of reputation for a single good review. It's in the contract that purposely misleading or taking false actions would result in hefty financial damages. Not to mention how expensive it would be for them to buy, package, and ship me 100 sealed tubes of somebody else's paste.
@@SalemTechspertswhile that is true, as a viewer, It would give me peace of mind if you had purchased from Amazon.
Although I know you can always replace the amazon product with the shared sample,
It's easier to trust you than coorporations.
Honestly, for the next time I need to use thermal paste I'll just use PTM7950 for the longevity and long-term cooling performance
It's Prime95 or go home. lol
Jokes aside, there's a lot of good thermal greases and cheap. Brazil has some almost as good as Kryonaut that costs like 5 USD. You could try Iceberg Cooling thermal paste.
Please include yeesterpaste 😭 there is nothing online benchmarking that paste against others! Thanks!
Thanks Steve
I made sure to use honey on your affiliate link
It would be intresting against noctua nt-h2
Next do a taste test. Also, I can not look at you the same after your Vegas stream
Now how long does it take to dry out compared to Noctua Nth2 ???
This ia very good question but unfortunately he never answer this.
I have always used noctua
Send it to Igor in Germany to have it analyzed.
We need taste test and sniff test for The Greatest Energized Technician that's Ever Lived
Not the Thermal test
Excellent video
we making it out of south korrea with this one
Have you tested PTM 7958SP : that a paste not a pad
No but as previously mentioned we can assume it does the same or worse as PTM7950 at a much higher cost than AMECH.
Comparison with the GD900 when
Wonder if I should get some of this for my i9 14900…
need it in my country
I use Noctua's NT-H2 thermal paste for years now. Don't know if I should make the switch?
What do you think about corsair thermal paste? Specifically TM30?
now to wait for the paste to show up in the part of the world where i live ...
Great video. You got my money
So the 7950 its better?
Yes and more expensive
@SalemTechsperts That's an important point haha
0:57 "[...] They are paying me for the Video, not for the conclusion."
If you are paid to make a Video about anything, then everything regarding that Video has been paid for. And any opinion about a company or product will be altered, be it consciously or unconsciously, by receiving money from them. Please make it clear that a sponsored video is not a review or unbiased test. Especially since this is a very widespread misconception on the internet. If something is not independent, it can't be unbiased. If you didn't receive money from them, you probably wouldn't have made this test, and they might not even have been included in the test.
Otherwise, great video!
I love your content
How often should i replace my Thermal Paste?
For a brief moment, I forgot what you were talking about in reference to grams. Anyway, I've got 2 tubes of AMeCh on my bench and its worked fine when I refurbish Dell workstations. My go to however is Noctua NT-H1, I've used it for years without issue.
when i try to determine cost per gram i end up in jail.
2:59 have at you!
RoboCop' 💩 (Thermal Paste) or 💦 (Liquid Metal) jokez plz! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
KPX, best hands down.
amech 🤝thermalright
budget cooling
Will this work for gaming laptop??
Thanks man.
Yoo he got a mic lfg😂😂😂
MX-6 & MX-4 are Artic Cooling products, not Arctic Silver, just FYI.
Yeester said he will meet you today at 3am