Concerns about overheating in Ryzen 3 2200G
Concerns about overheating in Ryzen 3 2200G
Hey! I just moved to an A6 with Ryzen 3 and I'm excited about it. For budget gamers, Ryzen really stands out. I’m happy to see my performance improve, but my main worry is the temperatures. I’ve noticed my CPU temps are fluctuating—about 40-50°C when I’m idle with Chrome and many tabs open, but it drops to around 40°C in a cooler room (35-57°C). When loading games it can jump up to 75°C. Is that safe? Could it affect the lifespan of my CPU? I don’t have any new thermal paste, and I’ll probably wait until after I replace my case. I’m using a cheap G-series cooler, which hasn’t been cleaned in a while—maybe it’s dusty now. Also, my case has no intake fan, which isn’t ideal but I’m in a tight spot financially.
I don't notice it staying at 75°C consistently. It only rises when the room gets too hot. Under normal conditions, it stays around 67°C during gameplay in a comfortable temperature range. This should be fine. Prolonged sessions at that heat won't harm your CPU's lifespan.
67-75C has minimal impact on longevity. Verify the connection with the heatsink and consider using the original cooler—it could perform similarly.
The temps between 75-80°C are ideal and won’t cause major damage to the processor. Any slowdown would be similar to reducing a lifespan from around 40 years to about 39.5 years. In practice, this isn’t a big deal—within 5 to 10 years you’d likely switch to something else. The CPU wouldn’t fail outright; instead, performance would drop noticeably, like moving from 3.8 GHz to the max of 3.65 GHz or losing support for high-speed RAM such as 3200 MHz sticks, forcing use of lower speeds like 3000 or 2666 MHz. Your motherboard’s BIOS keeps track of the processor’s safe temperature and automatically tweaks fan speed to stay below 80°C. You can check this with software like HWInfo to see real-time sensor data and fan rates. For instance, a fan might run at 2500 RPM at 75°C instead of its full capacity. Running the CPU at lower temps offers minimal gain, so the BIOS balances temperature comfort with quiet operation. If you need more cooling, you can adjust the fan curve in BIOS to run it slightly faster, increasing noise but cooling a bit more. Alternatively, you might remove the PWM wire from the fan connector (the fourth wire) to let the motherboard control speed via voltage reduction—though this depends on your board. Overall, it’s not a crisis, just a gradual performance shift.
My 3200G at 24°C room temperature never exceeded 38°C with the stock setting. I'm using air cooling with a Hyper 212 and Corsair ML120RGB, which has case fans on every slot of the Thermaltake H18 TG. The 2200G performs similarly to the 3200G, and I believe it should be easy to maintain around 50°C.