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Ione Hawke
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:24:00 -
[1]
Uhu, lets have some graph p0rn!
cpu / gpu temp - loading + market cpu / gpu temp - walking around a bit cpu / gpu temp - no station env
CPU: Phenom II X4 945 (3 GHz) [RED] GPU: Nvidia 460 GTX [GREEN]
Two accounts in windowed mode. First graph doing nothing but some Jita trading. Second graph walking around (for few seconds) till my CPU hit 80 degrees. The sharp decrease in temp in the second graph is with both clients minimized for a short while. Third graph is the temp with station env disabled.
GPU seems to hit a ceiling, I wonder if its some protection kicking in and adjusting clock or something. OTOH, it might just stabilize.
(I'll make a bug report)
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Anazzar
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:29:00 -
[2]
Do you have interval set to one or immediate?
setting it to one sorted out the CPU and GPU load/temps for me, don't really need 150fps anyway.
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Sephy'Ra
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:34:00 -
[3]
You just have a crappy heatsink on your gtx460. I have the Cyclone and it never ever ever exceeded 64ŚC. Though I haven't stressed it in a cosy 35ŚC enviroment yet, which I'm sure to hit in a few months when summer comes. Either way, 80ŚC should be no problem for a GPU. Not healthy maybe, but far from critical.
If you feel its too high there are plenty of other heatsink options out there. For starters you could check if there is enough thermal paste applied to the base of the heatsink.
Regards, Sephy
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Smoking Blunts
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:38:00 -
[4]
Originally by: Sephy'Ra You just have a crappy heatsink on your gtx460. I have the Cyclone and it never ever ever exceeded 64ŚC. Though I haven't stressed it in a cosy 35ŚC enviroment yet, which I'm sure to hit in a few months when summer comes. Either way, 80ŚC should be no problem for a GPU. Not healthy maybe, but far from critical.
If you feel its too high there are plenty of other heatsink options out there. For starters you could check if there is enough thermal paste applied to the base of the heatsink.
Regards, Sephy
he said 80c on the cpu... but still as the amd cpu cooks at 62 or 64c cant remember thats not good
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noneofnine
The Circle
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:38:00 -
[5]
Edited by: noneofnine on 23/06/2011 22:40:16 Complete useless info.
When do you ******s start to make things the right way?!? 1st post your card specs (manufacturer, version, cooling, is it oc'ed from factory?,etc...) 2nd post your ambient temp 3rd post your case cooling specs and airflow scheme 4th Read Nvidia specs (Maximum GPU Temperature (in C)104 C) 5th KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT AIR COOLING A GAMING BOX that runs demanding games 6th know that the tools that are available to manipulate the cards cooling exist for some reason 7th post cpu cooler model and manufacturer 8th post thermal paste used and if you did yourself or some1 else did the assembly and if you checked wich /how paste was used 9th if not happy with temps dont play Eve
ggeeezzzzz "Through me the way is to the city dolent; Through me the way is to eternal dole; Through me the way among the people lost." |
Ione Hawke
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:39:00 -
[6]
Originally by: Anazzar Do you have interval set to one or immediate?
setting it to one sorted out the CPU and GPU load/temps for me, don't really need 150fps anyway.
Interval is set to one, my FPS are around 30 (now with just one client in CQ). Interesting to note is that the Eve client that is in CQ uses consistently 29-40% CPU while the other client uses 03-05%. That suggests one thread takes 100% 'CPU' (and thus utilizes one core fully corresponding to 25% load).
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Ione Hawke
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:43:00 -
[7]
Originally by: Sephy'Ra You just have a crappy heatsink on your gtx460. I have the Cyclone and it never ever ever exceeded 64ŚC. Though I haven't stressed it in a cosy 35ŚC enviroment yet, which I'm sure to hit in a few months when summer comes. Either way, 80ŚC should be no problem for a GPU. Not healthy maybe, but far from critical.
If you feel its too high there are plenty of other heatsink options out there. For starters you could check if there is enough thermal paste applied to the base of the heatsink.
Regards, Sephy
It 80s deegrees on the CPU it has this cooler: Scythe mugen 2 and its currently summer in Europe.
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Mr Kidd
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:44:00 -
[8]
Edited by: Mr Kidd on 23/06/2011 22:47:28 Yeah my Geforce 9800 GTX temp is going through the ceiling when in CQ. So, it's off. And I lowered my video quality settings all to low from high and now it's hovering at a reasonable temperature of around 58C. Of course, I'm using a stock heatsink fan, however, I have 2 120mm case fans running full speed. One is pulling in air right on top of the GPU and the other is exhausting air from the top of the case. Still, I shouldn't be exceeding 75C which I have been. Nothing else seems to cause a temp variance of 30C but Eve.
I'm also running the same CPU as you, Phenom II X4 945. Core temp with Eve running atm is 51C. The heatsink and fan on that is not stock but I don't the model that I purchased. As far as heatsinks go, it's O K.
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Miilla
Minmatar Hulkageddon Orphanage
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:46:00 -
[9]
Can you add a graph for Crysis 1 and Crysis 2 please?
For comparisson :) (and lulz) :)
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Omara Otawan
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Posted - 2011.06.23 22:48:00 -
[10]
Edited by: Omara Otawan on 23/06/2011 22:50:28
No idea what the thermal specs of your cpu are, but 80ŚC sounds pretty damn hot and close to a burning out. My thermal alert on an AMD Athlon is set to 55ŚC just for comparison.
Do your fans run at full speed, are they maybe damaged or are the heatsinks clogged by dust?
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Mr Kidd
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Posted - 2011.06.23 23:10:00 -
[11]
Originally by: Omara Otawan Edited by: Omara Otawan on 23/06/2011 22:50:28
No idea what the thermal specs of your cpu are, but 80ŚC sounds pretty damn hot and close to a burning out. My thermal alert on an AMD Athlon is set to 55ŚC just for comparison.
Do your fans run at full speed, are they maybe damaged or are the heatsinks clogged by dust?
80C is hot. It's not far from the absolute thermal limit before the CPU is just going to shut itself down. I think the limit is somewhere between 110 - 120C. From a technical perspective I can't tell you what is "bad" for the CPU. But from experience, you don't want to have your CPU running at 80C for extended periods as it can shorten the life of it and any components attached to or near it.
I will run a CPU in the 70C range if needed but I always work to lower that. My comfort range is between 45 - 65C. Anything higher and I'm looking for solutions.
Things you need to consider:
1) Ventilation - Do you have good airflow through the case? What is the chassis temp? If you don't have a good program to tell you try speedfan. Look for the blue highlight word speedfan to dnload it. I use it. Gives CPU, board, socket, chassis & GPU. It can also control your fan speeds if you allow it to. My case fans were both turned in originally as I wanted to keep a positive pressure in the case to help keep dust out. They were both fitted with lite filters to collect dust before entering the case. The temps were too hot. So, I turned one to exhaust and removed it's filter. Temps were 5 - 10C cooler. So make sure you have proper airflow.
2) Heatsink and fan - make sure they're clean. If you can put a bigger fan on your heatsink if it will allow it.
3) Thermal paste - very important. If you're using the thermal pad/paste provided with your heatsink then it may be time to purchase some Arctic Silver or another high end paste. I redo my paste yearly as all pastes have a tendency to dry, cake and become less effective.
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Shintai
Gallente Arx Io Orbital Factories Arx Io
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Posted - 2011.06.23 23:14:00 -
[12]
CPUs run fine at 70C and 80C.
Alot of people uses coretemp or whatever to measure with. They get a Tjunction result and panic. Because the Tcase value listed on sites targetted shows say 65C. But Tcase is the external temperature of the chip. Tjunction is a DTS sensor inside the chip. And yes, there is a huge difference from the hottest parts and coldest parts of the chip.
Also all CPUs the last 5 year+ throttles if they get too hot. You can not ruin it by heat. Tpday voltage is the main CPU killer, followed by frequency. --------------------------------------
Abstraction and Transcendence: Nature, Shintai, and Geometry |
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