|
-
Safe temps for vid card and CPU in heatwave
I have a high-performance gaming PC and have programmed Everest to alert me and suspend the offending program when the GPU temp hits 80 degrees C. A few gfx-intensive games occasionally trigger the alarm although I try not to overtax my PC during a SoCal Summer heatwave with no a/c. Obviously I would prefer to err on the side of caution but is 80 degrees over-cautious?
The CPU is water-cooled and does not get up into the 80s but what do you think I should set the CPU temp alert for?
Many thanks, as always.
-
Administrator
It wouldn't hurt if you mentioned which cpu you have
"Vegetarians live up to nine years longer than the rest of us...Nine horrible, worthless, baconless years."
-
Sorry Steve, here are CPU and GPU specs:
Intel Core i7 920 2.66GHz (Quad Core): Factory o/c between 3.3GHz to 3.9GHz
1x NVIDIA GeForce GTX 285 2GB (Includes PhysX Technology)
-
Old School OCer
The book says 67.9C is max for your CPU. Forgot max temp for your GPU. Good case ventilation? Will need a fan blowing directly on the vidcard most likely.
The Money Trap = Intel i7 930 | Corsair H70 | ASUS P6X58D-E | 3 x 2GB G.Skill DDR3 2000 6-9-6-24 | EVGA GTX 580 DS SC | OCZ Vertex 2 90GB SSD | WD VelociRaptor | Klipsch ProMedia | Cooler Master HAF 932 | Antec TPQ-1200W | Dell U2711 2560 x 1440 27" | Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit | APC RS1500
-
Yup, good case ventilation, it's a purpose-built, ventilated case with plentiful fans and it is not enclosed in an alcove, or other closed-in space.
If anyone can advise re. GPU max temp, I'd be very grateful.
-
for GFX: 80C is a good spot for a warning, maybe 85. It should function up to mid 90s, and start artifacting before any permanent damage is done. However, if temps are getting this high then there *is* an airflow problem, most easily solved by ramping up the fan on the gpu. Spec is idle at 40% which is really not very adequate; i suggest a minimum of 60% if ambient temps are anything over 80F.
CPU temp alert should be utterly irrelevant if the water cooling is worth a damn at all. Max is most certainly higher than 67.9C (not sure where you dug up that number Oz)
Mine: Core i7-920 + Xigmatek S1283 // Gigabyte UD4P // gigabyte windforce hd6870 // 3x2GB Corsair DDR3-1333 // Antec 900 V2 // Corsair TX750 // WD 640GB Cav. blue // Samsung TOC T240 24"
kids: PhII 550 BE (quad unlocked) + freezer pro 64 // Gigabyte UD2H // 2x2GB Corsair DDR3-1600 // CM Centurion 5 // gtx260-216 // Corsair HX620 // WD 640GB Cav. black // some 22" monitor
-
Great information, Fluffmonster, many thanks.
I'll need to do a little research on how to change fan settings; I don't even know where the user interface might be found or if it's a hardware or software setting. Must be some kind of firmware, right?
Thanks for letting me know that 80C (not F, surely?) is a good ballpark number for the warning. Most games do not even trouble it, and never on non-Summer days. In a Summer heatwave,however, the un-taxed daytime GPU temp goes to about 51-55C; in those circumstances, I see most games pushing the GPU from there to about 75-78C, with the most graphically intense ones occasionally triggering the alarm.
Yup, the water-cooling is very effective. I have a temp alert set for that, too, but it never gets anywhere near it.
-
There are apps that will allow control of the fan speed. I use eVGA Precision which is derived from Rivatuner. I'm sure a google search will turn up several options.
I didn't get my Cs and Fs crossed....80C on the card is a good warning trigger, and I bump up the fan when *ambient* temps get above 80F.
Mine: Core i7-920 + Xigmatek S1283 // Gigabyte UD4P // gigabyte windforce hd6870 // 3x2GB Corsair DDR3-1333 // Antec 900 V2 // Corsair TX750 // WD 640GB Cav. blue // Samsung TOC T240 24"
kids: PhII 550 BE (quad unlocked) + freezer pro 64 // Gigabyte UD2H // 2x2GB Corsair DDR3-1600 // CM Centurion 5 // gtx260-216 // Corsair HX620 // WD 640GB Cav. black // some 22" monitor
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|