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  1. #1
    If I'm not back in 5....wait longer! Smock's Avatar
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    Default Questions for smrt people, I mean smart

    so im wathcing a tv show and playing ESO on ultra settings on my R9 280x, its running at 64 celsius... Is that too warm or is it ok?? Fans are only at 31% too

  2. #2
    Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue sinthetic's Avatar
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    No, that is perfectly normal. GPU's naturally run hot. Hell 64C is nothing that's actually quite low. My GTX 680 can hit about 70-80C when I play BF4 on ultra.

  3. #3
    Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue sinthetic's Avatar
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    Damn the edit times are FAST! EDIT: But if your are seriously concerned about the temps you can use a program such as AMD OverDrive and edit the fan speeds. It might even let you edit the fan curve and set fan speeds at certain temps. I'm not sure on that as I do not own a AMD card atm. But if you do bump up the speeds its probably gonna be quite loud keep that in mind.

  4. #4
    Keep honking. I'm reloading Damnation's Avatar
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    Seconded all ^

    I'd add that it's not worth installing a program to control the fan curve, unless you enjoy doing that kind of stuff.

  5. #5
    If I'm not back in 5....wait longer! Smock's Avatar
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    thank you, im not super smart when it comes to temps and stuff im just starting to learn all of this so i wasnt sure if 147.2 to be exact was too high for it

  6. #6
    Keep honking. I'm reloading Damnation's Avatar
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    CPU's usually shut down between 90 and 100C, video cards should be about the same.

  7. #7
    Professional Farmer at Work Denmarkvessey's Avatar
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    Those new AMD cards run hot, so 64 degrees is actually pretty good.

  8. #8
    The Token Staff Sergeant Master Butters's Avatar
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    Geeze, you guys don't mind it getting that hot? I start freaking out if my stuff goes over 50C

  9. #9
    Keep honking. I'm reloading Mokona512's Avatar
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    For CPU's different core designs have different target temperatures, e.g., a Phenom II CPU will not want to go much higher than 70C as it starts to lose stability, (still stable for stock speeds, but unstable when overclocked). The latest Intel CPU's can generally handle up to 90C without too many issues (though not recommended for long term use.

    Most videocards are designed to handle 90C+ which is more efficient. The larger the temperature delta between core temperature and ambient temperature, the more effective the heatsink becomes (which is why even though the heatsink cannot keep the CPU or GPU at room temperature, but it will stop heating past a certain point.

    If you design a device to run hot, then you can get away with a smaller heatsink. While different core designs will waste different amounts of electricity as heat, GPU's tend to push out more heat than CPU's especially at the upper end where the videocard will use 170-250 watts. If the core can maintain full stability at 90C then companies can use the temperature delta to their advantage.

    it is the reason why you may use a heatsink like the one below in order to cool a CPU that is pulling 95-120 watts


    but a videocard like a 350 watt dual GPU videocard (such as the 4870x2 can get away with something like this)


  10. #10
    Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue sinthetic's Avatar
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    Spot on. :)

  11. #11
    Save your breath. You'll need it to blow up your date! AOD Member AOD_Blankwindow's Avatar
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    Yeah my old 7950 GX2, the air between the two cards would reach 105C (the GPUs itself usually only reach about 55-60c). -this was the prototype card for the 8800 essentially so it was basically 2 7950s with a cross mount to make it one card. Each board had its own heatsync and fan.

    The major difference between the 7950 GX2 and the 8800 was with the heat. The 8800 was enclosed and the cards were inverted so that one heatsync could deal with both gpu cores, while the 7950 GX2 wasn't it was open, and was essentially just two independant boards glued together and a bus put in to merge the traffic.

    As far as performance they were equal. I could run any game at the same settings as the 8800 with a +/- 5 fps of it.

    because of the open design the fans just couldn't push enough of the heat out the back on the bottom board. So a heat bubble would form between the two cards. The bottom heat sink fan would in turn start to draw air from thus bubble. Thus using hot air to try and cool.

    However even with peak usage having the air temp around the card @ 105 C and I would game at that temp for 2-8 hours 4-6 days a week. The card still went 4 years before it died of heat stroke. (well presumably, not actually sure why it died)

    Just for frame of reference, while the air between the two boards was 105C, the overall case air temp never rose above 40 C (usually hovered around 37-38), and the CPU temp never went about 45 C.



    compared to



    Forgot to say that part of the reason mine lasted so long was probably because I had a 120mm cas fane level with the GPU that instead of having it blow hot air out like it had been doing for years before that GPU i swapped it and had it blow cool air in, this solved most fo the heat problem going from avg of 115-120 C at peak to about 105 at peak.
    Last edited by AOD_Blankwindow; 06-02-2014 at 01:01 PM.


 

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