- Joined
- Jun 24, 2015
- Messages
- 8,209 (2.34/day)
- Location
- Western Canada
System Name | ab┃ob |
---|---|
Processor | 7800X3D┃5800X3D |
Motherboard | B650E PG-ITX┃X570 Impact |
Cooling | NH-U12A + T30┃AXP120-x67 |
Memory | 64GB 6400CL32┃32GB 3600CL14 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4070 Ti Eagle┃RTX A2000 |
Storage | 8TB of SSDs┃1TB SN550 |
Case | Caselabs S3┃Lazer3D HT5 |
70 is understandable but going from reviews and tests from that cpu cooler saying its running a 5900x at 68c top open bench,
wow vs a 5600x i thought i was gonna get those temps or close to 70c in my case at 75F in my house, damn
the stuff flew directly to 81c, like boom directly on my face.
Ive been planning on grabbing the lian li lancool mesh II, i will have options to use aio too ,
like the artic freezer 280 that GN recommends for ryzen cpus or just going air cooling that i always prefer that way.
Since that case has better airflow can improve a little the temps. Ive never like h510 but was a cheap deal i got.
5900X is, in the most simplistic sense, a better 5600X taped to a crappier 5600X all under 1 heatspreader. Low thread count loads always go to the better CCD, and the crappier CCD is always made to clock lower. So the 5600X and 5900X will behave about the same.
The vast majority of these reviewers are used to more conventional CPUs, where the hottest temperatures come from full all-core load. The TPU review lists temperatures running Blender; the 6-core chiplet SKUs sit at about 70C max in those loads under any decent cooler. But when you start playing CPU-bound (or older, stupidly single-threaded and CPU-bound) games that sustain long-term maximum effective clock on a single core, the temp spikes start climbing.
It's a lot more liberal in making use of its temp envelope than Ryzen 3000. 5600X is allowed up to 95C by AMD. As long as you're not pushing more current (via all-core OC or some PBO configs) than the PB algorithm restricts through the core at those temps, longevity won't be an issue.