G.Skill Trident Z5 NEO RGB 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5 6000 CL30-38-38-96 1.35V F5-6000J3038F16G AMD Expo Issue with 7950X3D
G.Skill Trident Z5 NEO RGB 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5 6000 CL30-38-38-96 1.35V F5-6000J3038F16G AMD Expo Issue with 7950X3D
It was probably just a minor issue—the thermal cutoff for those chips is around 110°C. The system would have stopped if that were true. It seems typical, as X3D chips are quite power- and current-limited during high-stress tests like Prime95. Memory issues are more likely, though blending them in isn't harmful. For stress testing memory controllers on Ryzen, Linpack Xtreme works well with 40 loops and a 10GB dataset; if your IMC is unstable, it should crash soon. Running that could help. Y cruncher VST also performs well for IMC testing, especially for FCLK checks.
Thank you for your assistance. I plan to test later just to confirm everything is stable. Everything seems fine so far. For the Large FFTS benchmark, AVX should be either enabled or disabled. Regarding the Cinebench R23 results, my CPU runs between the 70s and 80s while the package temperature reaches 87-89°C with fans running at full speed. I achieved a score of 35,067 MC and 1968 SC. This is typical for the 7950X3D according to my research, but with a 360mm AIO it feels a bit warmer. Perhaps reapplying the thermal paste could help since I had difficulty getting the AIO in place during installation. I tried touching it against the CPU and couldn't secure it, removed it a few times, but it might be making things slightly hotter—though it shouldn’t significantly affect performance. Maybe I should give it another go. All settings remain as default with PBO on auto. Only changes made so far are enabling SOC at 1.3V.
It doesn't really matter much. AVX might seem more demanding in theory, but in reality the way AVX 512 functions on Ryzen 7000 chips makes it slightly easier. The main challenge here isn't the AIO capacity, but getting heat away from a 7950X3D. You could attempt a repaste if you're determined, though it probably won't help much. The best solution for keeping things cooler is using liquid metal or a copper block with more thickness.
I was just worried about possibly damaging it unevenly or making changes more than once while trying to install it, even though I hadn’t powered the PC on yet. Everything seems fine to you now. By the way, your PSU is a Thor Platinum II 1000W and it’s drawing air from the back into your Hyte Y60 case.