If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Bent pins on brand new P4 - Common or not?
Hi,
I built a new PC for a friend today and taking a brand new P4 2.6 800FSB CPU out of the box it appeared fine. However, it simply did not slot into place with the most gentlest of positioning. Upon closer examination 6 of the pins on an outside row were slightly bend inward with one also be slightly at a 90 degree angle to that. Five minutes later and very gentle pushing with a small flat end screwdriver and the pins were straight but... A few months ago I had one bent pin on a new P4 CPU also so... how common is this? J. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Yep, that's another thing - the heavy heatsink is in this incredibly well
sealed plastic carton next to the CPU and it takes real brute force to get that packing open which 'explodes' everything out if you are not careful. The plastic itself is so hard you can't get a knife or scissors in there easily without creating damage. Not very well thought out packaging. The CPU should be better protected. Glad I ain't the only one to get some bent pins though. J. "JAD" wrote in message thlink.net... abuse in shipping/packaging. I have had a few..if i'm still at the pickup window I ask for another, if not and if they aren't at a 90 degree angle I'll straighten them with a small plastic spackle spreader type deally(tech term). So damn easy to open that plastic bubble and the chip goes flying too. Tested time and again by my 'helping' grandson. "John Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, I built a new PC for a friend today and taking a brand new P4 2.6 800FSB CPU out of the box it appeared fine. However, it simply did not slot into place with the most gentlest of positioning. Upon closer examination 6 of the pins on an outside row were slightly bend inward with one also be slightly at a 90 degree angle to that. Five minutes later and very gentle pushing with a small flat end screwdriver and the pins were straight but... A few months ago I had one bent pin on a new P4 CPU also so... how common is this? J. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
"John Smith" wrote in message ... Yep, that's another thing - the heavy heatsink is in this incredibly well sealed plastic carton next to the CPU and it takes real brute force to get that packing open which 'explodes' everything out if you are not careful. The plastic itself is so hard you can't get a knife or scissors in there easily without creating damage. Not very well thought out packaging. The CPU should be better protected. Glad I ain't the only one to get some bent pins though. J. "JAD" wrote in message thlink.net... abuse in shipping/packaging. I have had a few..if i'm still at the pickup window I ask for another, if not and if they aren't at a 90 degree angle I'll straighten them with a small plastic spackle spreader type deally(tech term). So damn easy to open that plastic bubble and the chip goes flying too. Tested time and again by my 'helping' grandson. "John Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, I built a new PC for a friend today and taking a brand new P4 2.6 800FSB CPU out of the box it appeared fine. However, it simply did not slot into place with the most gentlest of positioning. Upon closer examination 6 of the pins on an outside row were slightly bend inward with one also be slightly at a 90 degree angle to that. Five minutes later and very gentle pushing with a small flat end screwdriver and the pins were straight but... A few months ago I had one bent pin on a new P4 CPU also so... how common is this? J. TIP A credit card slides snugly between rows of pins, this helps straighten them out, also protects other pins when u use something to bend them with. Try it see what you think. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
I think the AMD Retail packaging is the worst. I've used a bandsaw on
occasion.... "John Smith" wrote in message ... Yep, that's another thing - the heavy heatsink is in this incredibly well sealed plastic carton next to the CPU and it takes real brute force to get that packing open which 'explodes' everything out if you are not careful. The plastic itself is so hard you can't get a knife or scissors in there easily without creating damage. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Built another one today and examining the plastic packaging closely we
noticed on each side of the chip the plastic packaging actually indents very close to the pins in the middle of the chip for about 8 - 10 pins. Nuts! They go to all that expense building clean factories and precision machines to put the chip into a very poor plastic pacakge. Why they don't have a dummy socket protecting the pins is beyond me? J. "mad scientist" wrote in message ... " Yep, that's another thing - the heavy heatsink is in this incredibly well sealed plastic carton next to the CPU and it takes real brute force to get that packing open which 'explodes' everything out if you are not careful. The plastic itself is so hard you can't get a knife or scissors in there easily without creating damage. Not very well thought out packaging. The CPU should be better protected. Glad I ain't the only one to get some bent pins though. I had the exact same thought while I was building my computer. The process of getting the items out of the packaging can be really difficult! |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
lightning strike - should the components be reused | rello | General | 19 | May 5th 04 01:03 AM |
16kx4 cache 24 pins? | Mic | General | 0 | April 7th 04 04:09 PM |
How to connect front audio ports to mobo | *Vanguard* | General | 5 | December 17th 03 09:35 PM |
adding a PS2 port to an old PC | Jan Biel | General | 6 | September 30th 03 03:13 PM |
Power Surge | David LeBrun | General | 44 | September 12th 03 02:35 AM |