F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop No, it’s not recommended to run the i3 12100f above 90°C with stock cooler during unpacking.

No, it’s not recommended to run the i3 12100f above 90°C with stock cooler during unpacking.

No, it’s not recommended to run the i3 12100f above 90°C with stock cooler during unpacking.

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Fantasie
Junior Member
13
05-07-2016, 06:31 PM
#1
Yesterday I tried using a repack to download a game, but it made quite a lot of noise during the process. After checking the afterburner from MSI, it indicated temperatures between 90-100°C with brief cooling pauses.
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Fantasie
05-07-2016, 06:31 PM #1

Yesterday I tried using a repack to download a game, but it made quite a lot of noise during the process. After checking the afterburner from MSI, it indicated temperatures between 90-100°C with brief cooling pauses.

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Jayhawk_Down
Senior Member
350
05-08-2016, 03:09 AM
#2
Ensured sufficient thermal paste application. Verified connection between IHS and cooler.
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Jayhawk_Down
05-08-2016, 03:09 AM #2

Ensured sufficient thermal paste application. Verified connection between IHS and cooler.

V
vinic00kie
Member
215
05-08-2016, 04:55 AM
#3
Yeah, I'd check and make sure you didn't forget some plastic foil between the cpu and the heatsink, and that there's thermal paste between cpu and heatsink. While you're there, make sure the cooler is tight, that there is some pressure on the cpu, and it's not loose just standing in place due to the retention clips/legs There may be a bios option, something related to fan curves, maybe in bios you have the cpu fan set to "silent" or something like that, in which case the fan normally runs at lower speeds so the heatsink will be warmer most of the time, and when you start doing something very cpu intensive, it would take much less time for the cooler temperature to rise to 90-100. If that's the case, you could try to adjust that fan curve to keep the fan at higher speed all the time, and to spin up the fan much faster when the temperature increases.
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vinic00kie
05-08-2016, 04:55 AM #3

Yeah, I'd check and make sure you didn't forget some plastic foil between the cpu and the heatsink, and that there's thermal paste between cpu and heatsink. While you're there, make sure the cooler is tight, that there is some pressure on the cpu, and it's not loose just standing in place due to the retention clips/legs There may be a bios option, something related to fan curves, maybe in bios you have the cpu fan set to "silent" or something like that, in which case the fan normally runs at lower speeds so the heatsink will be warmer most of the time, and when you start doing something very cpu intensive, it would take much less time for the cooler temperature to rise to 90-100. If that's the case, you could try to adjust that fan curve to keep the fan at higher speed all the time, and to spin up the fan much faster when the temperature increases.

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DankLlamas
Member
108
05-18-2016, 05:02 PM
#4
I have the 12400, I used the stock cooler for a bit, when stress testing for half an hour with Cinebench, max temp was 88C. There's definitely an issue with your cooler. Re-seat the cooler, I'm sure that either the mounting pressure is not proper, or thermal paste wasn't enough/not applied properly.
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DankLlamas
05-18-2016, 05:02 PM #4

I have the 12400, I used the stock cooler for a bit, when stress testing for half an hour with Cinebench, max temp was 88C. There's definitely an issue with your cooler. Re-seat the cooler, I'm sure that either the mounting pressure is not proper, or thermal paste wasn't enough/not applied properly.

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Luctony74
Member
107
05-19-2016, 01:06 AM
#5
Handling files during packing and unpacking is extremely taxing for the CPU. A 5900X running at high load hits 80°C, suggesting an i3 on a basic cooler might perform better.
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Luctony74
05-19-2016, 01:06 AM #5

Handling files during packing and unpacking is extremely taxing for the CPU. A 5900X running at high load hits 80°C, suggesting an i3 on a basic cooler might perform better.

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DrummerBS
Member
185
05-19-2016, 04:12 AM
#6
Thanks! The temperatures during gaming can hit around 65-70°C. I’ll verify the cooler setup (noticing it usually lacks foil on standard models). Regarding the Beats 2 FX, is it worth purchasing for €50?
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DrummerBS
05-19-2016, 04:12 AM #6

Thanks! The temperatures during gaming can hit around 65-70°C. I’ll verify the cooler setup (noticing it usually lacks foil on standard models). Regarding the Beats 2 FX, is it worth purchasing for €50?

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MrKryp
Senior Member
643
05-19-2016, 06:48 AM
#7
I was always told it was standard practice. Now I'm testing your advice for a cooler and will let you know what happens (stay tuned).
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MrKryp
05-19-2016, 06:48 AM #7

I was always told it was standard practice. Now I'm testing your advice for a cooler and will let you know what happens (stay tuned).

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JULIANO030
Member
226
05-19-2016, 10:23 AM
#8
It requires some time.
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JULIANO030
05-19-2016, 10:23 AM #8

It requires some time.

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NinatoPvP
Posting Freak
899
05-23-2016, 08:40 PM
#9
Most things perform much better with heatpipes for transferring heat. Your power usage at those high temperatures would be significantly lower. Updated: Jan 12, 2023 by DreamCat04
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NinatoPvP
05-23-2016, 08:40 PM #9

Most things perform much better with heatpipes for transferring heat. Your power usage at those high temperatures would be significantly lower. Updated: Jan 12, 2023 by DreamCat04

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LuigiXGames
Senior Member
426
05-24-2016, 09:53 PM
#10
I believe the power is around 60 watts (I use the base frequency boost from ASRock). The temperatures decrease for about half a minute when lowering from 90 to 60 (probably thermal throttling, not sure). I think it doesn't really affect things during that unpacking session.
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LuigiXGames
05-24-2016, 09:53 PM #10

I believe the power is around 60 watts (I use the base frequency boost from ASRock). The temperatures decrease for about half a minute when lowering from 90 to 60 (probably thermal throttling, not sure). I think it doesn't really affect things during that unpacking session.

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