Temperatura do CPU é um fator importante para o desempenho e a saúde do sistema.
Temperatura do CPU é um fator importante para o desempenho e a saúde do sistema.
The temperatures are a bit elevated... Thanks to @Wardus and @Naijin for pointing out the design in the front left intake and the bulge at the bottom of the panel. It's within my preference, but after testing, airflow remains acceptable. Opening both side and front panels can lower CPU temps by about 2-4°C and GPU temps by around 3°C. I experimented with using the AIO as intake and the 2 140mm exhaust, but it didn't help much for the GPU. I'm planning to try it again. Should the rear fan always be running? — Jed. P.S. Undervolting gives me some anxiety since I'm not sure what I'm doing.
Truly, AMD kept it easy with undervolting. My 5600X is paired with PBO for higher clocks, but I’ve stayed within the built-in limits and it handles everything smoothly at home using a Noctua NH-U12A without overheating beyond 70°C during simultaneous synthetic tasks. I don’t run F@H, so I don’t have the exact details. Ryzen Master can help you explore safe undervolting ranges.
After trying it out, the situation isn't what it seems. I accessed the side panel and stayed away for a week, still seeing high temperatures around 90°C even with the AC running! I'm unsure how to proceed. I'll look into undervolting and see if it helps.