Are normal operating temperatures being maintained during CineBench tests?
Are normal operating temperatures being maintained during CineBench tests?
Ryzen 5 1400 with MSI B350m Bazooka. Experimenting slightly with overclock adjustments. Curious about optimal temperatures during a render test in Cinebench. I aimed to record precise values, though I didn’t save HW monitor data at the correct moment.
Stock settings: 3.2MHz, CPU voltage auto set mainboard temp low in the 120s (F), CPU temp at 129(F), and package node 0 at 154(F) when running at full speed.
Second test at 3448Mhz, only changing CPU ratio, voltage again auto, HW showed around 1.25V. Mainboard temps mid-120s (F), CPU temp at 132(F), package node 0 at 160(F) at top setting.
Just wondering how these readings stack up. I haven’t performed a stability test, but I’m noticing only minor changes in BIOS settings. I’ll note that it improved by about 132 points overall, which is modest but appreciated. Not the highest performance, but it still runs adequately.
The temperature will mainly be influenced by cooler airflow and the room's ambient temperature. Also, ensure your readings are in Celsius, which is standard for PC applications.
Here are your reference temperatures:
Idle-25-30, cinebench up to 55, Intel I5 6600k, full custom loop. Ambient temperature around 21°C (70°F).
Based on the cooler reading of 160f(72c), it doesn't appear extremely hot. However, it might feel a bit warm in that mildish environment.
Stock cooler. And I get it, Celsius is common, but as an American, I only know Fahrenheit.
I'm also from America, just like many others. But when it comes to computers, Fahrenheit is a strange term. All the monitoring equipment uses Celsius. It makes things more understandable for everyone. People who work with PCs don't use Fahrenheit. Using Celsius would be better for more people. With the stock cooler, those temperatures look normal.