 Cheap thermal paste with a high-end CPU. What could go wrong? What's up internet? The Ryzen 7 3700X usually goes for around 15,000 pesos and normally we would use something like this, Noctua's NTH1, around 300 pesos to help cool it. But there are cheaper thermal pastes. Much cheaper. As in single digits cheaper and we got all of them and we tried them out. Hindi nilig anong dici. Gusto ay di kelam na windows. Pero saan ko hukuan ng legit windows? Daming options, daming prices. Aka nito. Gudi na lang. May cdkeyoffers.com. Magdalilang ng order. Search for the software you need and to cart. Daan ka sa payment options nila. Wala pag 5 minutes finished. May legit, working cdkey ka na para sa windows mo. Gamitan ng aming code para makakuhapan ng discounts. Kaya kung nagahalap ka ng legit, mura at original software. Check out cdkeyoffers.com. So we did a roundup of premium thermal pastes in the past and you can see the results here. But this high price equate to high performance. We're snobs and we love our Noctua but can the cheap thermal pastes surprise us? Not gonna lie, actually they did. Our setup consisted of a fractal design R6 case with a Ryzen 7 3700X and its stock cooler. Then we punished the CPU with Cinebench R23 for 30 minutes and then recorded the maximum temp reached by each paste in that time period. At stock speeds, actually all of the cheap pastes did a pretty good job. In line actually with Noctua's NTH1 which we used as a benchmark. The 9 peso Viking Keen YNPJ hit a temp of 78 degrees. 10 peso HY410 was toasty at 79 degrees. 20 peso GD900 was really good actually at 75 degrees. 25 peso YJG190 was okay at 77 degrees. And finally the 55 peso HY510 was solid at 75 degrees. Not too shabby and all of the cheap pastes did their job well enough so that the PC didn't crash during the test. So of course we weren't satisfied with that and overclocked the 3700X to 4400MHz at 1.325V. Did any of the cheap pastes survive the overclock? Yes, actually at least one of them passed the overclock. Starting with the benchmark, the NTH1 of course handles the overclock no problem with a max temp reached of 80 degrees. 9 peso YNPJ flunks, it crashed 10 minutes into the test and hit a max temp of 84 degrees. 10 peso HY410 almost made it. Crashing at a 26 minute mark with a max temp of 87 degrees. Sayang lapit na niya to completing the test. Clear winner is the 20 peso GD900 which passed the test. Completed the 30 minute test on overclock speed with a max temp of 81.3 degrees with inhaling distance of the mark of the NTH1. 25 peso YJ61900 was the worst performer crashing at a 5 minute mark with a max temp of 86.5 degrees. The most expensive cheap paste, the HY510 at 55 pesos also could not handle the overclock. Crashing at around a 12 minute mark with a max temp of 83.5 degrees. So there's a clear winner among the cheap pastes and that's the GD900 which scored the lowest temperature at the stock speed test with 75 degrees tied with the HY510 and it was the only cheap paste to actually survive the overclock. I'm impressed and honestly a bit surprised by the results. If you're using an office computer or a build that doesn't need a lot of performance then actually any of the cheap pastes would be okay for you. One caveat with these pastes though is that since they border on the generic no one really polices what gets labeled as GD900 then you could be buying what you think is good cheap paste but then who knows what you'll get. If what you'll get is really the GD900. That's one of the whole points of a brand is that when you buy Noctua you know that you're getting an original Noctua and you're getting Noctua's quality. Still for a non-performance build it looks like you can go with any of the cheap pastes currently on the market and you'll be fine. So if you get one of these cheap thermal pastes you'll get around 280, 300 pesos swaq na yon para sa 6 month membership sa YouTube membership namin. Just a suggestion in case nimaw alam anong gagawin mo sa savings mo. Thanks for watching. And thank you to our top fans na afford na namin to kupuwa na to and edyok lang. Thank you to Leah Magnaya, Ian Meru, ITX addict, John Ruben Ocha, Christian Espinoza, and Raphael James. Thank you for supporting the channel.