- Joined
- Jun 23, 2014
- Messages
- 1,374 (0.36/day)
Processor | 3900X 4.425 |
---|---|
Motherboard | X570 Tomahawk |
Cooling | Galahad 360 push-pull |
Memory | 2x16gb Crucial Ballistix MAX 4400 |
Video Card(s) | Asus Dual 3060 Ti OC |
Storage | Optane 280gb PCI-E |
Display(s) | PG348Q |
Case | Core X71 |
Audio Device(s) | ATOLL DAC 100SE, Sony DN1070 - Dali Ikon 1 MK2, Presonus Studio 192, Line 6 POD HD rack, Audix VX10 |
Power Supply | AX1500i |
Mouse | Pulsar Xlite wireless white |
Keyboard | Leopold FC980C 30g white |
Software | Win 10 Pro |
A peltier is completely unnecessary for an everyday gaming PC, like, way more unnecessary than me daisy chaining my EK Phoenix units to cool my 3900X. Ryzen CPUs don't consume a lot of power at all, and they have a curve that makes them slowly increase in temps unlike Intel chips that skyshoot right when you launch Cinebench. If you have a high core count CPU, in that case, you won't even need that said 5-10C decrease in the temperatures because the CPU will never really be %100 loaded.
You will just be dumping excessive heat in your room for no sensible reason. We want efficiency in our computers, not inefficiency. Due to the nature of peltiers, they ARE inefficient. It will only make your room get hotter and need more air conditioning. Definitely pointless.
You will just be dumping excessive heat in your room for no sensible reason. We want efficiency in our computers, not inefficiency. Due to the nature of peltiers, they ARE inefficient. It will only make your room get hotter and need more air conditioning. Definitely pointless.