F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking I9 9900k heat

I9 9900k heat

I9 9900k heat

E
epicninja60
Member
66
12-15-2018, 11:29 AM
#1
Hi guys, just checking if it's typical for an i9 9900k with the Asus xi hero to run Realbench with a 95C core under stock settings.
E
epicninja60
12-15-2018, 11:29 AM #1

Hi guys, just checking if it's typical for an i9 9900k with the Asus xi hero to run Realbench with a 95C core under stock settings.

I
IceBjornn
Member
98
12-15-2018, 11:42 AM
#2
No, those temperatures are significantly too high at stock as they should be in the 70s with a custom loop. There seems to be an issue with your cooling system. The maximum temperature for the 9900k is 100°C, so you're almost there. Likely, you're reaching around 100°C and the CPU is downclocking to protect itself by lowering the temperature to 95°C.
I
IceBjornn
12-15-2018, 11:42 AM #2

No, those temperatures are significantly too high at stock as they should be in the 70s with a custom loop. There seems to be an issue with your cooling system. The maximum temperature for the 9900k is 100°C, so you're almost there. Likely, you're reaching around 100°C and the CPU is downclocking to protect itself by lowering the temperature to 95°C.

G
ghaali
Junior Member
20
12-17-2018, 06:58 AM
#3
No, those temperatures are significantly too high at stock as they should be in the 70s with a custom loop. There seems to be an issue with your cooling system. The maximum temperature for the 9900k is 100°C, so you're almost there. Likely, you're reaching around 100°C and the CPU is downclocking to protect itself by lowering the temperature to 95°C.
G
ghaali
12-17-2018, 06:58 AM #3

No, those temperatures are significantly too high at stock as they should be in the 70s with a custom loop. There seems to be an issue with your cooling system. The maximum temperature for the 9900k is 100°C, so you're almost there. Likely, you're reaching around 100°C and the CPU is downclocking to protect itself by lowering the temperature to 95°C.

S
SayNoToNWO
Posting Freak
879
12-21-2018, 03:02 AM
#4
My loop order is pump, rtx2080ti, 240mm ek pe, cpu, 360 ek or then back to pump. This was running a real bench for 4 hours with 8gb mem. I have 16gb installed, and my gpu ran around 50-60 during this test.
S
SayNoToNWO
12-21-2018, 03:02 AM #4

My loop order is pump, rtx2080ti, 240mm ek pe, cpu, 360 ek or then back to pump. This was running a real bench for 4 hours with 8gb mem. I have 16gb installed, and my gpu ran around 50-60 during this test.

A
Abdonix
Member
66
12-28-2018, 01:48 AM
#5
What are your GPU temperatures? Are they within normal ranges? If not, it might mean your CPU water block isn't installed correctly. Your setup looks great!
A
Abdonix
12-28-2018, 01:48 AM #5

What are your GPU temperatures? Are they within normal ranges? If not, it might mean your CPU water block isn't installed correctly. Your setup looks great!

B
beastgamer__
Junior Member
33
01-01-2019, 10:52 AM
#6
I have my temperatures available if needed. I've adjusted the CPU block several times already. For the ECU block, it provides thumb screws and springs—tighten them until they reach their limits. Be careful not to overdo it, as this could cause issues.
B
beastgamer__
01-01-2019, 10:52 AM #6

I have my temperatures available if needed. I've adjusted the CPU block several times already. For the ECU block, it provides thumb screws and springs—tighten them until they reach their limits. Be careful not to overdo it, as this could cause issues.

S
134
01-02-2019, 11:34 AM
#7
I wouldn't go over tightening them too much, but I'd tighten until the end.
Are you sure you're applying thermal paste?
S
scarygungaming
01-02-2019, 11:34 AM #7

I wouldn't go over tightening them too much, but I'd tighten until the end.
Are you sure you're applying thermal paste?

C
Crazy_Heaven
Posting Freak
811
01-02-2019, 12:43 PM
#8
I'm employing the thermal grizzly Kryonaut with the spread technique.
C
Crazy_Heaven
01-02-2019, 12:43 PM #8

I'm employing the thermal grizzly Kryonaut with the spread technique.

A
ash_girlyfox
Junior Member
32
01-05-2019, 08:25 PM
#9
k_closs :
I’m employing thermal grizzly Kryonaut with the spread method.
It’s possible you were told about the system type, but it’s hard to say for sure.
Could you confirm if the pumps are active? Are you certain it’s set to stock? You might want to reset the bios to factory defaults just to verify.
A
ash_girlyfox
01-05-2019, 08:25 PM #9

k_closs :
I’m employing thermal grizzly Kryonaut with the spread method.
It’s possible you were told about the system type, but it’s hard to say for sure.
Could you confirm if the pumps are active? Are you certain it’s set to stock? You might want to reset the bios to factory defaults just to verify.

C
Cyanstrophic
Senior Member
668
01-06-2019, 05:05 AM
#10
You don't have a flow meter, but the pipes close to the CPU are at roughly the same temperature as the rest.
C
Cyanstrophic
01-06-2019, 05:05 AM #10

You don't have a flow meter, but the pipes close to the CPU are at roughly the same temperature as the rest.