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by magicalhippo 295 days ago
> The formula doesn’t even mean anything, in real physical terms.

From your description the formula is how you would calculate the power for which a certain heatsink at a given ambient temperature would result in the specified IHS temperature.

The °C/W number is not a conversion factor but the thermal resistance[1] of the heatsink & paste, that is a physical property.

So unless I misunderstood you it's very much something real in physical terms.

[1]: https://fscdn.rohm.com/en/products/databook/applinote/common...

1 comments

It might be a useful formula _if_ the numbers were real. Note that when AMD tells you that a 9900X cpu is has a 120W TDP, that's because they picked three numbers to plug into that formula that result in 120 popping out. They picked the result of 120 first, and then found numbers to put into the formula so that it gives you that result.

But the reason I say that it’s physically meaningless is that real heat dissipation is strongly temperature dependent. The thermal conductivity of a heatsink goes up as the temperature goes up because heat is more effectively transferred into the air at higher temperatures.