GPUs & CPUs & Enthusiast hardware: Questions, Discussion and fanboy slap-fights - Nvidia & AMD & Intel - Separe but Equal. Intel rides in the back of the bus.

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Speaking of air coolers, I think I found a solid Noctua I'll get next paycheck
That one's solid. Used to have it in an itx build with another fan bolted on the back from noctua. I went with it because I wanted more space for intake fans and I could also fit a stove pipe fan out the top.

Edit:Not sure if lowish profile is what you want from that fan, but if space is not an issue there are better ones. That one is just a good compact fan, for the cooling it does.
 
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I have had nothing but problems with Nvidia. I've only ever encountered problems once which required reflashing the card on amd with new vbios.
 
Pull them towards the other side, just a bit. They hook under the edge of the heatsink fins so you pull towards the side opposite the fan along the heatsink and THEN they'll hinge out.

And it sounds like it might be bad thermal grease, it's cheap enough that it's really better to replace it if there's any question. On the other hand I've used stuff that was sealed well and years old.
Actually the one direction I didn't try pulling :story: . Thanks for the advice.
 
That one's solid. Used to have it in an itx build with another fan bolted on the back from noctua. I went with it because I wanted more space for intake fans and I could also fit a stove pipe fan out the top.

Edit:Not sure if lowish profile is what you want from that fan, but if space is not an issue there are better ones. That one is just a good compact fan, for the cooling it does.
Good to know it's solid. Really I'm looking at price. It seems like it can deal with the heat from a i12700k, so I think I'd rather have it than something bigger and pricier. I do have a ATX case I got at a thrift store already, but I don't want to make it too tall.
I have this exact cooler on my 5600X. Near silent with a minor fan curve adjustment, and keeps the CPU under 73 degrees.
That temp sounds perfect. Admittedly I'll be going with something hotter, a i7, but from the reviews, it seems like it'll deal with it. If you think differently, please tell.
 
they really don't. look up "ryzen 3/5/7000 high temperature" and you'll get a ton of results that show 80c+ temps even with liquid coolers
Well that's interesting. In any case, the cooler I picked is actually built for both AMD and Intel, so I'm assuming it can handle the load fairly well. I also just like it because of the radiator fins
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Low cost AND it looks straight out of star wars. I think it'll do well
 
they really don't. look up "ryzen 3/5/7000 high temperature" and you'll get a ton of results that show 80c+ temps even with liquid coolers
Are any of those from sources that know how to apply thermal paste? 80c on a water cooler does require further context, such as how much are they overclocking it.
 
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Are any of those from sources that know how to apply thermal paste? 80c on a water cooler does require further context, such as how much are they overclocking it.
Yeah that's a big question. Ryzen in my experience runs fairly mellow. A water cooler should keep it cool, which is already overkill, even for something like Intel.
 
Cherrypicking 101
what are you talking about? it is well known that these CPUs run hot due to the chiplet design, and for the 7000 series it's even worse because of the thicker IHS
Are any of those from sources that know how to apply thermal paste? 80c on a water cooler does require further context, such as how much are they overclocking it.
it's usually proper builds with stock settings, you can't really overclock AMD post ryzen 2000 anyway. AMD claims that these temperatures are perfectly normal and nothing to worry about, the posts are mainly from people who are disappointed that their fancy coolers did not make a drastic difference at full load
 
what are you talking about? it is well known that these CPUs run hot due to the chiplet design, and for the 7000 series it's even worse because of the thicker IHS

it's usually proper builds with stock settings, you can't really overclock AMD post ryzen 2000 anyway. AMD claims that these temperatures are perfectly normal and nothing to worry about, the posts are mainly from people who are disappointed that their fancy coolers did not make a drastic difference at full load
you have done nothing to assure that these "posts" are not from idiots that don't know how to remove the plastic protective film from the heatsink. A cursory search only found situations that were solved by replacing a defective cooler https://community.amd.com/t5/processors/5900x-overheating/m-p/511261#M45585
 
you have done nothing to assure that these "posts" are not from idiots that don't know how to remove the plastic protective film from the heatsink.
do i really have to? it takes 5 seconds to look it up
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AMD themselves say that the CPUs are supposed to run hot
 
they really don't. look up "ryzen 3/5/7000 high temperature" and you'll get a ton of results that show 80c+ temps even with liquid coolers
How high is high? I thought my 5900x runs high at ~40C tctl at idle but that's apparently normal. When doing stress test, it barely tops out at 80C tctl running on a Scythe Ninja 5.
 
Most people rarely put their CPUs under a sustained load for any meaningful length of time. I wouldn't worry too much about the cooling solution as long as it's within spec, since you're not running an always-on server that's put under sustained load for days at a time.
 
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