F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Yes, that’s correct. The temperature is 90°C.

Yes, that’s correct. The temperature is 90°C.

Yes, that’s correct. The temperature is 90°C.

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augustb19907
Senior Member
456
07-16-2016, 04:25 PM
#1
Navigating through the demands of my workload, the core temperature sits near 89-91°C and clock speeds range from 3.9 to 4.1 GHz. That’s likely the CPU throttling. I’ll review my fan curve next, then see if pushing fans to maximum works—checking whether the system defaults to that speed or respects the PC’s own settings.
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augustb19907
07-16-2016, 04:25 PM #1

Navigating through the demands of my workload, the core temperature sits near 89-91°C and clock speeds range from 3.9 to 4.1 GHz. That’s likely the CPU throttling. I’ll review my fan curve next, then see if pushing fans to maximum works—checking whether the system defaults to that speed or respects the PC’s own settings.

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lkfTimLeung
Member
136
07-17-2016, 10:50 AM
#2
Bios settings show fans capped at maximum in the 70+ degree range. Adjusting to medium seems insufficient against core strain. "High speed" still feels like throttling under load. Consider switching to Ultra High Speed or removing the front cover—maybe airflow restriction remains an issue.
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lkfTimLeung
07-17-2016, 10:50 AM #2

Bios settings show fans capped at maximum in the 70+ degree range. Adjusting to medium seems insufficient against core strain. "High speed" still feels like throttling under load. Consider switching to Ultra High Speed or removing the front cover—maybe airflow restriction remains an issue.

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diXCas_75
Junior Member
9
07-18-2016, 11:44 AM
#3
Your cooler isn't working properly—consider upgrading to a better one.
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diXCas_75
07-18-2016, 11:44 AM #3

Your cooler isn't working properly—consider upgrading to a better one.

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Say_Say123
Member
120
07-18-2016, 01:35 PM
#4
I hoped my old 280mm AIO with 2 Silent Wings 4 would suffice. I think upgrading might not be necessary since the AIO only fails under full core load, which I seldom encounter. Just using UE as a hobby, the CPU stays below 60°C for most threads. If I did upgrade, I’d wonder which tower cooler would fit and handle the 5800X3D.
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Say_Say123
07-18-2016, 01:35 PM #4

I hoped my old 280mm AIO with 2 Silent Wings 4 would suffice. I think upgrading might not be necessary since the AIO only fails under full core load, which I seldom encounter. Just using UE as a hobby, the CPU stays below 60°C for most threads. If I did upgrade, I’d wonder which tower cooler would fit and handle the 5800X3D.

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thefrogkid
Member
209
07-18-2016, 03:28 PM
#5
I'm a bit stiff with my coffee. Are you using CO? If not, you should be.
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thefrogkid
07-18-2016, 03:28 PM #5

I'm a bit stiff with my coffee. Are you using CO? If not, you should be.

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CurlyFry77
Member
141
07-18-2016, 05:24 PM
#6
CO refers to the company or organization in question. If you mean OC'ing, it means everything is covered. No undervolts involved—just straightforward.
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CurlyFry77
07-18-2016, 05:24 PM #6

CO refers to the company or organization in question. If you mean OC'ing, it means everything is covered. No undervolts involved—just straightforward.

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Bakedpotato6
Junior Member
47
07-24-2016, 04:48 PM
#7
You can't really change the chip itself, I was discussing a curve optimizer. Setting it to -30 across all cores should give you maximum boost and cooler temperatures.
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Bakedpotato6
07-24-2016, 04:48 PM #7

You can't really change the chip itself, I was discussing a curve optimizer. Setting it to -30 across all cores should give you maximum boost and cooler temperatures.

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Wiriya
Junior Member
33
08-06-2016, 11:30 PM
#8
Followed a user to push my CPU to its limits using prime95 and full core usage. I saw an average of around 83°C with maximum load, but only four threads reached about 87°C at full speed. In theory, everything matched my CPU's specs. It might have been the game workload that differed. I’ll keep testing, but this really shook my confidence in building PCs.
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Wiriya
08-06-2016, 11:30 PM #8

Followed a user to push my CPU to its limits using prime95 and full core usage. I saw an average of around 83°C with maximum load, but only four threads reached about 87°C at full speed. In theory, everything matched my CPU's specs. It might have been the game workload that differed. I’ll keep testing, but this really shook my confidence in building PCs.

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Leyhaya
Posting Freak
801
08-07-2016, 09:28 PM
#9
P95 is a top program for your CPU, which is why it becomes quite warm
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Leyhaya
08-07-2016, 09:28 PM #9

P95 is a top program for your CPU, which is why it becomes quite warm