R**S
A bunch of little heat sinks to keep your toys running for a long time.
HEAT kills electronics. I use these for more than just my RPis. Modern stuff has poor ventilation and cooling because vent holes are ugly. So to keep my toys running correctly and longer, I usually drill holes in the housing nicely and mount heat sinks on the chips that get hot. I use an IR Thermometer and address what I can. Ex. My Router, dropped 17C of heat after adding 20 holes and a heatsink; surprise, no more randon crashes needing reboots! WD TV Live, same thing, haven't restarted that in months now. My RPi's used for PiHole and Docuwiki, running great!
H**M
Great value
I only needed one set but at this price, now I have spares!
B**H
Great small heat sink assortment
You have a selection of several sizes and types of heat sinks. The adhesive is strong and will stick to the components well. This is a great kit to have around if you play with RaspberryPi and the small electronic boards.
B**A
Maybe look for heat pads if putting on vram on a gpu
The copper material is really good however the sticky substance is not as sticky as it should be. The copper plate was placed on VRAM on a gpu but during installation of the card back in to the PC, the heat sinks would fall off. I did get them to stay on vram (for now). Lets see if they can stay on for a good 6 months.
A**S
Things are smaller that they appear.
I should have pulled out a ruler first, but I was expecting the copper plates and the ‘large’ heat sinks to fit the CPU. They are made for the secondary, smaller chips. :-|That said, I had no issues with the adhesive. I needed tweezer to put them on the chips.
I**3
Inexpensive Heat Sinks
If you want to get the most out of your Raspberry Pi, you need heat sinks. These are inexpensive and easy to install.
R**R
Good Heatsinks
A supply of small heatsinks to have on hand if you work with SBCs.
T**Y
As described
If you have a larger case like mine you can use the larger heat sinks ond all three chips.