OneMoar
There is Always Moar
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2010
- Messages
- 8,803 (1.62/day)
- Location
- Rochester area
System Name | RPC MK2.5 |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5800x |
Motherboard | Gigabyte Aorus Pro V2 |
Cooling | Thermalright Phantom Spirit SE |
Memory | CL16 BL2K16G36C16U4RL 3600 1:1 micron e-die |
Video Card(s) | GIGABYTE RTX 3070 Ti GAMING OC |
Storage | Nextorage NE1N 2TB ADATA SX8200PRO NVME 512GB, Intel 545s 500GBSSD, ADATA SU800 SSD, 3TB Spinner |
Display(s) | LG Ultra Gear 32 1440p 165hz Dell 1440p 75hz |
Case | Phanteks P300 /w 300A front panel conversion |
Audio Device(s) | onboard |
Power Supply | SeaSonic Focus+ Platinum 750W |
Mouse | Kone burst Pro |
Keyboard | SteelSeries Apex 7 |
Software | Windows 11 +startisallback |
instantaneous crashing/artifact is not thermal thats a hard-failureThere are other components that overheat too you know. Either way the mounting of the waterblock is definitely wrong, so a remount is in order...and yeah if the VRM is fried then there is nothing to salvage...
if the vrm was 'fried' it would be on fire or completely dead
you do not know what you are talking about you are taking a little bit of knowledge and making faulty assumptions about how this stuff works
its neigh impossible to damage a vrm(or core for that matter) on modern hardware simply by removing cooling unless you actively go and disable the multitude of thermal safety systems (and no raising the slider in msi ab doesn't count)
these cards are perfectly happy to run all day at 90c at 1600 to 1800mhz