![]() I haven’t actually had time to find the lowest stable under volt yet, maybe I could get it lower and cooler. At least when looking at the boost clock and benchmark numbers. Lowering the voltage didn’t luckily cost me any performance. By lowering the voltage by 0,05 the temperature while gaming is ~63 degrees and running Cinebench R23 it is ~81 degrees Celsius. To get the temperature to a more comfortable zone I finally turned to under volting. Also it is interesting that the 5800X seems to be running on higher voltage out of the box when compared to other Ryzen 5000 series CPU’s. As it turns out some of the 5800X CPU-s seem to be running a bit warm, as other people had reported similar higher temperatures. So I started googling a bit about 5800X temperature. Temp dropped only ~1-2 degrees.Īlthough while gaming or other lighter multicore loads the temperature is a bit more reasonable, the CineBench temperature still bothered me. Even went as far as swapped the original paste that was pre-applied at the factory for Thermal Grizzly Hydronaut paste. Initially thought I botched the cooler installation somehow when I saw the full load temperatures go well over 87 degrees Celsius, under CineBench R23 multicore load. I paired the 5800X with the NZXT X63 AIO cooler and currently I think it was a good choice that I didn’t try and save on the cooler. So that meant that after many more than a decade I was switching back to the Red Team from the Blue Team. On the launch day I managed to grab myself a Ryzen 5800X. After seeing AMD-s presentation I thought I might as well give it a try. So I decided to wait and I’m so glad I did. As Intel hadn’t made too much progress over the years over my current system, just added some cores and that’s it and AMD’s coming Zen3 was rumored to be really good. When I started looking at nearest release dates to see if it would be worth while to wait a bit. The “ itch” started during the summer already. I'm not there yet obviously.After a few years it was time again to upgrade my computer. Coming from a 4790K, I guess I'm still way beyond what I could get previously.Īnyway I will keep investigating to get somehow a turbo capability with decent temperature under stress (something around 70C-80C). I remember at one of my first try on Cinebench I got like 15K something (frequency up to 4.8 Hgz). So I guess it's logic with PBS and CPB disabled : no more turbo frequency. Then tested on Cinebench on multi core : 12K something with the frequency not going over 3.7 something. Then proceeded to disable both PBS and CPB.Īmbient temperature is like 19C/66F right now and the system is rather cool (36-42C) on idle. Once done, had to reset my memory to 3600. ![]() Anyway, this morning, I couldn't get any video signal and I had to clear CMOS. The goal was not to reach a new performance level but rather to make it cooler while keeping a decent power. Īfter 'playing' cautiously (at least I thought so) with overclocking last night, I didn't have much of a result. However I thought it was a good idea because I know soon or late I will have to encode video (Handbrake and Premiere) and AFAIK it's power hungry. Of course I don't plan to run Cinebench all day :p But I thought it was worth the test to see how the whole system behave when under stress. So I'm wondering if that temperature (88° C) is okay when asking for all the power and in that case I guess I must prepare to change my fan profile so I don't feel like 'leaving on a jet plane' or I must investigate and lower the max clock frequency somehow in the bios.įorgot to mention the board being an ITX, I got a NCASE M1 6.1 and unlike my previous case, it's sitting on my desk (like 80cm/2.5 feet from my ears) so noise can be an issue.Īnyway, if you have thoughts or advices, I'd be happy to hear from you. Mostly because the frequency is down to 2196 Mhz and 'wake up' according to the needs (at least that is what I understand). For office stuff or even gaming on Wow, it's real nice (right now, writing those lines, about 35° C). Reading all the posts here and there, it's quite confusing.ĭespite that and without too much customization in the bios (besides custom fan profile), I'm ok with the processor on Windows and Linux. Testing with Cinebench in multi core, I have seen the temperature reaching 88° C. My system : Ryzen 5800X, ASROCK B550 Phantom Gaming ITX/ax (Bios 1.8/AGESA 1.1.0.0 patch C), 64 Gb HyperX Predator 3600 CL18, Kraken X53 (2xNOCTUA NF-F12 PWM/exhaust), chassis fan NOCTUA NF-A9x14 PWM/intake (92mm), MSI RTX 2060 VENTUS XS 6G OC, Sabrent Rocket Q4 1 To. ![]()
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