Skip to content

ThePawn02

Gaming and Streaming Content

  • Blog
  • Editor's Picks
  • eSports
  • Guides
  • Headlines
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Uncategorized
  • Website Update
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Watch Live
  • News
  • eSports
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Guild Login
    • Guild Mentality
    • The Zealots
    • Malign
  • Socials
    • Youtube Channel
    • Twitch Channel
    • Kick.com
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
Subscribe
  • Home
  • 2024
  • December
  • Putty, not pads: Thermal Grizzly’s new thermal materials might be the best thing for your graphics card just don’t ask for any numbers
  • News

Putty, not pads: Thermal Grizzly’s new thermal materials might be the best thing for your graphics card just don’t ask for any numbers

Do you want moderate, good, or excellent?
December 17, 2024 3 min read
Putty, not pads: Thermal Grizzly’s new thermal materials might be the best thing for your graphics card just don’t ask for any numbers

Do you want moderate, good, or excellent?

Reapplying a fresh layer of thermal paste to a graphics card’s GPU is quite easy but dealing with its thermal pads is another matter altogether. Thermal Grizzly reckons it has the perfect solution, in the form of a thick putty that you can slap onto the VRAM and VRM chips, instead of worrying about what thickness of pad you need to buy.

Thermal interface materials (TIMs) are required because the contact surface between a chip and a heatsink/cooler isn’t a perfect match—there are always microscopic gaps between them and the trapped air acts as an insulator. TIMs fill in the gaps, improving the heat flow between the two parts, and come in many different forms, such as a paste, liquid, or even a soft pad.

While it’s a relatively simple task to reapply fresh thermal material to a CPU, graphics cards are more of a challenge due to using two very distinct kinds of TIM: paste for the GPU itslef and thermal pads for the other heat-generating components. The latter vary in size and thickness and trying to figure out what they should be replaced with is quite tricky, unless the manufacturer offers that information in some clear form. Which can be rare.

This is probably why Thermal Grizzly decided to apply its knowledge and experience of TIMs to thermal pads and its solution is simple: Bin the pads, slap on some putty—or in this case, TG Putty.

This takes all of the guesswork out of the thermal pad problem and because thermal putty isn’t electrically conductive, you can be very liberal with how you slap it around the graphics card. Thermal Grizzly says its putty is suitable for filling gaps over a range of 0.2 to 3.0 mm, which should cover all possibilities. All one needs to do first is give the components a thorough clean with isopropanol to remove any grease.

A promotional image for Thermal Grizzly's TG putty

(Image credit: Thermal Grizzly)

However, I do have one criticism of Thermal Grizzly’s putty, well, the different levels of putty anyways. I’ve not tried it yet, but I’m not sure which one would be suitable for testing anyway. There are three variants to choose from—Basic, Advance, and Pro—but all Thermal Grizzly offers in the way of understanding the difference between them is a fairly useless thermal conductivity rating.

The Basic putty is ‘moderate/medium’, the Advance is ‘good’, and the Pro is ‘excellent’—but what does that even mean? How much better is excellent compared to moderate? If you were really keen on using some TG Putty, the obvious solution would be to use the Pro version, simply because it has the ‘best’ thermal conductivity.

But at $43 for a 30-gram pot, it’s more than twice the price of the Basic putty. That would be justifiable if the putty’s actual thermal conductivity was more than double that of the Basic, but without any specific values, you’re left to simply take Thermal Grizzly’s word on the matter.

I’m definitely sold on the idea of using thermal putty instead of pads with graphics cards, but I need a darn sight more than just one word to make any kind of an informed decision.


Best AIO cooler for CPUs: Keep your chip chill.
Best air cooler for CPUs: Classic, quiet cooling.
Best PC fans: Quiet and efficient.

About Post Author

See author's posts

Continue Reading

Previous: Marvel Rivals is getting its first seasonal event soon, which’ll let you run around as everyone’s favourite land shark to play some legally-distinct Splatoon
Next: Zotac website leak seemingly confirms monstrous 32GB Nvidia RTX 5090 but we’re still concerned about how stingy Nvidia might be further down its new GPU range

Related News

Grounded 2 will have less frequent, much larger early access updates
2 min read
  • News

Grounded 2 will have less frequent, much larger early access updates

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
Tempest Rising’s first major update targets the Command and Conquer successor’s multiplayer, adding 6 maps, a 2v2 ranked mode, and an extensive balance overhaul
2 min read
  • News

Tempest Rising’s first major update targets the Command and Conquer successor’s multiplayer, adding 6 maps, a 2v2 ranked mode, and an extensive balance overhaul

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
That 16-bit Terminator 2 throwback doesn’t feature Arnie’s likeness, but it did license the guy who played adult John Connor for 30 seconds in the film’s intro
3 min read
  • News

That 16-bit Terminator 2 throwback doesn’t feature Arnie’s likeness, but it did license the guy who played adult John Connor for 30 seconds in the film’s intro

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025

Latest YouTube Video

Check out these awesome streamers

ThePawn02 on twitch

From Gamewatcher

  • Chrono Odyssey Preview
  • Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine Review
  • Dune: Awakening Review
  • How to get a Worm Tooth in Dune Awakening
  • Phasmophobia Chronicle Update Release Date - Latest News

From IGN

  • Limited Edition IGN Artist Series Hellwalker Prints from Dave Rapoza Now Available
  • Duke Nukem Rights Acquired by Devil May Cry and Castlevania Showrunner
  • Anime Rising Codes (June 2025)
  • Rockstar Fans Think They've Worked Out the Truth Behind Those Red Dead Redemption Teases — and It's Not What They Were Hoping For
  • Parasite Testing Codes (June 2025)

From Kotaku

  • Kotaku’s Weekend Guide: 3 Delightful Games We’re Swinging Into Summer With
  • Mario Kart World's Mirror Mode Is A Little Too Confusing To Activate
  • Six Things I Wish I Knew Before Setting Up My Switch 2
  • Sprite + Tea Review: This Crap Needs To Be Outlawed
  • What Do Smart Steering And Auto-Accelerate Do In Mario Kart World?

.

You may have missed

Grounded 2 will have less frequent, much larger early access updates
2 min read
  • News

Grounded 2 will have less frequent, much larger early access updates

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
Tempest Rising’s first major update targets the Command and Conquer successor’s multiplayer, adding 6 maps, a 2v2 ranked mode, and an extensive balance overhaul
2 min read
  • News

Tempest Rising’s first major update targets the Command and Conquer successor’s multiplayer, adding 6 maps, a 2v2 ranked mode, and an extensive balance overhaul

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
That 16-bit Terminator 2 throwback doesn’t feature Arnie’s likeness, but it did license the guy who played adult John Connor for 30 seconds in the film’s intro
3 min read
  • News

That 16-bit Terminator 2 throwback doesn’t feature Arnie’s likeness, but it did license the guy who played adult John Connor for 30 seconds in the film’s intro

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
No More Room in Hell 2’s latest update transforms its zombie horror from a cooperative game to a solo extraction shooter when enough players die
3 min read
  • News

No More Room in Hell 2’s latest update transforms its zombie horror from a cooperative game to a solo extraction shooter when enough players die

ThePawn.com June 21, 2025
Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Watch Live
  • News
  • eSports
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Guild Login
  • Socials
  • Twitch
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Kick.com
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.