- Joined
- Apr 17, 2021
- Messages
- 577 (0.42/day)
System Name | Jedi Survivor Gaming PC |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7800X3D |
Motherboard | Asus TUF B650M Plus Wifi |
Cooling | ThermalRight CPU Cooler |
Memory | G.Skill 32GB DDR5-5600 CL28 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 3080 10GB |
Storage | 2TB Samsung 990 Pro SSD |
Display(s) | MSI 32" 4K OLED 240hz Monitor |
Case | Asus Prime AP201 |
Power Supply | FSP 1000W Platinum PSU |
Mouse | Logitech G403 |
Keyboard | Asus Mechanical Keyboard |
Heat output is not related to temperature. No his comment was not sarcasm. Ignorance here is astounding, even after it has been carefully explained and an entire article written about it. Your 90 degree CPU in your iPhone is not generating much heat, 3W usually.
Sure the exact same CPU will produce more heat overall with a higher performance and voltage target, but again, nothing to do with temperature. Think about it this way, if you run your fan at 1000rpm and hit 95 degrees, and you run it at 2000rpm and hit 65 degrees, does it affect the heat generated or the performance? No. Same wattage, same performance without throttling. Same for Intel. Nothing new here.
The only thing that matters is "does THIS CPU throttle performance significantly when it reaches high temperatures" and the answer is conclusively, no.
It seems a lot of people actually think lower temperatures are higher performance or less heat. All those people with $300 coolers and they get the same performance and the same amount of heat comes out of their cases, but they don't know that. This has always been the case. Nothing has changed. The only point was to avoid throttling.
Sure the exact same CPU will produce more heat overall with a higher performance and voltage target, but again, nothing to do with temperature. Think about it this way, if you run your fan at 1000rpm and hit 95 degrees, and you run it at 2000rpm and hit 65 degrees, does it affect the heat generated or the performance? No. Same wattage, same performance without throttling. Same for Intel. Nothing new here.
The only thing that matters is "does THIS CPU throttle performance significantly when it reaches high temperatures" and the answer is conclusively, no.
It seems a lot of people actually think lower temperatures are higher performance or less heat. All those people with $300 coolers and they get the same performance and the same amount of heat comes out of their cases, but they don't know that. This has always been the case. Nothing has changed. The only point was to avoid throttling.
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