![]() ![]() The last item that I purchased was the Artic Freezer 7X but because I wanted to have some headroom in term of cooling for future upgrade with the 5600X in view, so I also added two additional Noctua NF F12 fans to bring fresh air and help exhaust of hot air, one is feeding the GPU, the CPU being feed with the case's stock 120 mm fans with the CPU fan aligned to it and to the second Noctua NF F12 behind it.Īgain, at full load with 3D Mark Pro 4K Gaming, 3840 x 2160 and 2 X MSAA and boosted with Ryzen Master, pick temperature never exceeded 73☌, according to my upgrade records, it's more than 5☌ cooler than with the stock Ryzen cooler with Ryzen 5 3600X, 5☌ higher (78☌) being the temperature of my system with the 3600X and the same aftermarket Artic. Now cut it you're begining to pull the hell out of me not being able to admit your were wrong.įor those interested, I upgraded my case precisely for better cooling, I reached the maximum cooling capabilities of the old one which dated from Pentium III and couldn'y cope with generated heat as early as I fitted a Ryand the EVGA NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti 11GB in it, you could have cooked an egg on top of the case. FALSE in BOTH case demonstrated by both AMD and Intel, you can try to twist yourself to knots, you wrote B.S and I corrected it with datas from both manufacturers. YOU brought volage up to try to explain that this CPU was running HOT. In other words, your CPU cooler can be cold to the touch, and the CPU reporting high temperatures at the same time. Especially under partial load like games, when Cpu is boosting single cores very high. It's just a consequence of boosting algorithm applying reltively high voltages for 7nm process. AMD Ryzen cpus have low TDP because they don't consume much power and they don't produce much heat when you look at the whole package.Īt the same time, the cores themselves can run as high as 90 degrees before throttling and anything below is just a normal operating temperature according to AMD. ![]() TDP is not the same thing as CPU temperature.
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