Core 2 owners will have to excuse me for being blunt here, but I think the fitting for LGA775 heatsinks is the worst I've encountered for the 10 years that I've been tweaking\building PCs.
The latest example of it causing me trouble is this:
While fixing a friend's PC, a fully secured LGA775 heatsink (originally fitted several months back) popped out of the motherboard and collided with the chipset cooler. Yes, the grips underneath actually snapped and the whole thing fell off. I've never seen any other type of heatsink do this. It wasn't even that heavy: an Arctic Cooling one weighing about 400g, mostly aluminium. mavity wasn't working against it either, as the PC was on its side at the time.
Socket A\370 were fiddly, even Socket 478 and 939 clips were a little annoying. But at least the hooks worked and didn't require me to bend the motherboard several degrees while fitting them. Or endure 20 minutes of plastic grips bouncing back up\getting stuck.
I think I'll give this platform a miss the next time I'm required to build a PC...
The latest example of it causing me trouble is this:
While fixing a friend's PC, a fully secured LGA775 heatsink (originally fitted several months back) popped out of the motherboard and collided with the chipset cooler. Yes, the grips underneath actually snapped and the whole thing fell off. I've never seen any other type of heatsink do this. It wasn't even that heavy: an Arctic Cooling one weighing about 400g, mostly aluminium. mavity wasn't working against it either, as the PC was on its side at the time.
Socket A\370 were fiddly, even Socket 478 and 939 clips were a little annoying. But at least the hooks worked and didn't require me to bend the motherboard several degrees while fitting them. Or endure 20 minutes of plastic grips bouncing back up\getting stuck.

I think I'll give this platform a miss the next time I'm required to build a PC...