- Joined
- Dec 19, 2022
If you want to throw away your money on useless non-beige fans, far be it from me to stop you.Wrong. Absolutely postively wrong.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If you want to throw away your money on useless non-beige fans, far be it from me to stop you.Wrong. Absolutely postively wrong.
The beige fans aren't even the most premium option nowadays. They have the black ones now that cost even more.If you want to throw away your money on useless non-beige fans, far be it from me to stop you.
I got the same kind of deal last summer and I'm cooling it with an AIO watercooler. It idles at 40c and peaks at 70c, my old 4th gen i5 ran at about room idle temperature and would peak at 50c.Oldish post but, I ended up getting a 5600x and motherboard combo for $200. Finished rebuilding last night and either I fucked up the cooler install or Ryzen runs a lot hotter than my old 8600K.
On idle, with auto settings, it fluctuates from 50 to 65c, where the fan is pretty loud. Under load it gets hotter and louder obviously.
Thinking about slapping a Noctua NH-D9L on there.
I'd be fine with an AIO but my ancient case doesn't support anything bigger than a 140mm.I got the same kind of deal last summer and I'm cooling it with an AIO watercooler. It idles at 40c and peaks at 70c, my old 4th gen i5 ran at about room idle temperature and would peak at 50c.
I'm using one of these with my Ryzen 7 5700x, and it generally keeps temps below 60°C while it's running at 100%. YMMV, of course.I'd be fine with an AIO but my ancient case doesn't support anything bigger than a 140mm.
Nah, watercoolers need to be a bit bigger than that to make sense. Realistically you'll get equal or better cooling with a dual tower cooler, you would get a small watercooler either because your case doesn't have room for a big dual tower air cooler, or because you think it's cool.I'd be fine with an AIO but my ancient case doesn't support anything bigger than a 140mm.
Watercoolers are most efficient (in terms of heat dissipation per perceived noise level) when the temperature delta is high. I have a 280x60mm radiator on my 7950X+6900XT computer, and it's keeping them both well cooled. After being on 100% for a while the water will reach about 50 degrees, where the CPU is stable at 85 degrees during load, and the GPU around 70 degrees. Thanks to the high ΔT, my fans never need to go higher than about 40%, which is basically inaudible because Noctua. The fans can go up to 3000rpm so if I wanted to I could have a low Δ, but the noise becomes just unbearable. I agree that AIOs tend to be pretty mediocre, but now that CPUs and GPUs regularly drink 300+W, watercooling is more relevant than ever.Eh, honestly don't think AIOs are worth it anymore. That $35 air cooler will most likely beat just about all of them. Water cooling in general isn't really great anymore unless you go super overkill so you can have a quiet pc while maintaining some really low liquid temp delta of like 5c over ambient.
Eww. 50 degree liquid temp. I used to run an air-liquid delta of 4 degrees at only 50% fan load. I'm going to guess I run a lot more rad and fans than you. While the high delta means you transfer the heat to ambient air for efficiently, you're picking up heat from your components less efficiently than me having a liquid temp barely over 30c.Nah, watercoolers need to be a bit bigger than that to make sense. Realistically you'll get equal or better cooling with a dual tower cooler, you would get a small watercooler either because your case doesn't have room for a big dual tower air cooler, or because you think it's cool.
Watercoolers are most efficient (in terms of heat dissipation per perceived noise level) when the temperature delta is high. I have a 280x60mm radiator on my 7950X+6900XT computer, and it's keeping them both well cooled. After being on 100% for a while the water will reach about 50 degrees, where the CPU is stable at 85 degrees during load, and the GPU around 70 degrees. Thanks to the high ΔT, my fans never need to go higher than about 40%, which is basically inaudible because Noctua. The fans can go up to 3000rpm so if I wanted to I could have a low Δ, but the noise becomes just unbearable. I agree that AIOs tend to be pretty mediocre, but now that CPUs and GPUs regularly drink 300+W, watercooling is more relevant than ever.
Yeah, I have the one 280x60mm radiator, with two Noctua 140mm 3000rpm fans on it. I can run the fans at full blast and have a low ΔT (5-10 degrees) if I wanted to, but then I can hear the computer even through my closet door (it’s in a rack in a walk-in closet, so my office can be nice and quiet). I prefer having the water hot and the fans doing a good job removing heat even at low rpm. Even with the water at fifty degrees my CPU and GPU are well below the point where they throttle, so this provides adequate cooling. I would rather say that your obsession with keeping the water so cold is silly. You’re working the fans harder and probably not gaining anything unless your water blocks are particularly bad at transferring heat and you actually need the water so cold in order to keep the components cool.Eww. 50 degree liquid temp. I used to run an air-liquid delta of 4 degrees at only 50% fan load. I'm going to guess I run a lot more rad and fans than you. While the high delta means you transfer the heat to ambient air for efficiently, you're picking up heat from your components less efficiently than me having a liquid temp barely over 30c.
Ideally your liquid should never feel warm. Your rads and fans aren't cooling the parts, they're cooling the liquid.
But I'm not working the fans harder. I have more radiator eliminating heat and fans in push pull so they can individually work less hard. I'm not saying your way is wrong, it's just a pretty normal setup. Mine is in overkill territory because eh, I like the hobby and I like to keep components as cool as possible.I would rather say that your obsession with keeping the water so cold is silly. You’re working the fans harder and probably not gaining anything unless your water blocks are particularly bad at transferring heat and you actually need the water so cold in order to keep the components cool.
Fair enough.But I'm not working the fans harder. I have more radiator eliminating heat and fans in push pull so they can individually work less hard. I'm not saying your way is wrong, it's just a pretty normal setup. Mine is in overkill territory because eh, I like the hobby and I like to keep components as cool as possible.
Yeah, I’m doing more or less the same. My case is a DIY thing, so it only has the two 140mm spots on the front. The only other fan is the 120mm one in my power supply. Air goes in through the radiator at the front, then passes over the passively cooled expansion cards, VRMs, and DIMMs, then exhausts through slots at the back and through the power supply. Works great. I have quick disconnects fitted on the back so I can plug in an external radiator, but in practice I’ve never needed it and it’s a hassle to purge the air from after a water change so I never use it. It’s a Mo-Ra 420, with that thing hooked up I probably have better ΔT than you do, it’s mental.Pretty much if my case has room for a rad, I'm putting one there. To me a fan without a radiator is a waste. I'm running aquasuite as well so that I can maintain a custom fan curve depending on my ambient air to liquid temp delta.
Ah, that's pretty neat. I think I tried to do a small case loop once and gave up lol. I only roll with full/super towers now, so I have to fill them up with something and just happen to have a shit ton of fans lying around so I go nuts with emYeah, I’m doing more or less the same. My case is a DIY thing, so it only has the two 140mm spots on the front.
Speak of the devil. That cooler is gonna get some more attention now.I personally think noctua gear is overpriced. I've heard very, very good things about the peerless assassin 120 se which is only $35 on Amazon.
View attachment 4760626
Competes quite well against the much more expensive D15. If you can fit it, they have the 7 pipe 140mm Frost Commander. The bigger and more overkill you go, the quieter you can run.
Companies like Arctic and Thermalright are doing God's work by showing that no, you don't need to buy $30 fans and $100 coolers to get top shelf performance.Speak of the devil. That cooler is gonna get some more attention now.
That would probably dox me, it's pretty unique.Show case