![]() But I don't think it has any actual value. People love to trot it out as a convenience. "Shortening the lifespan" is such a vague and unquantifiable concept. I've never had a GPU fail in twenty years, so in my experience no. If it's normal use and the temperature is within design limits the card doesn't throttle). If they didn't see fit to fret over 82C, why should you? Would this temperature make the GPU live shorter then it would otherwise? You say engineers have a better insight, but I'm thinking what if the problem is in my case or something, even tho my last gpu was fine The engineers have a much better insight on the design and tolerances of the card. It'd help but it's not required so it's depends on whether you can live with the higher.but not dangerous temps **Bottom line is undervolting and changing fan curves, fan placement or extra fans all takes some trial and error. My 2070 Super works fine at 90% power where as a friends can manage 85% with the exact same card. Not guaranteed to work as it may not like less volts. ![]() You may be able to lower the voltage and maintain the same level of performance. You maybe able to lower power to and in turn that'll lower temps. Like CPU's some silicon lottery is at play. Not too hot but it's noisier than having case fans on performance mode so I switch that back earlier today. However, when gaming the GPU is getting less air so it's fans spin faster, make more noise and GPU gets hotter. I can't even tell system is on in silent mode its that quiet. As it's cooler weather here I switched to silent mode. Silent caps RPM and spins slower than performance. Better fans and/or fan placement and/or faster case fan curves.įor example I can switch all my case fans to silent or performance mode. *See if you can get more air to the card via case fans. That will depend on cases airflow and the installed case fans. Though I do think the mid 70's whilst gaming would be average for most users. So there really isn't anything to worry about. If it was getting too hot the fans would already be at 100%. If it's only at 80% on it's default fan curve it's nothing to worry about. Originally posted by Балдеж:my fans are like 80% at this stage, so at which point of temperature should I start worrying? If they didn't see fit to fret over 82C, why should you? Not much benefit in it getting so hot it will fail, and that's just basic hardware safety that's existed for many years now. The card will run at half speed if it has to. The card would ramp up to 90C and throttle, but keep chugging along. But I got to see this behavior first hand with no fans. As long as your card isn't throttling, or shutting down to avoid damage you shouldn't be having an issue worth worrying about.Ī few years ago I had a 1080 ti and the fan controller failed and it took me a bit to notice because at the time I happened to be playing some not terribly demanding games. ![]() The card will throttle if it gets too hot and that will reduce the temperature and than fans will keep working. my fans are like 80% at this stage, so at which point of temperature should I start worrying? GPU's run hotter than people realize.Īre your fans working? Is the card throttling? You can probably fiddle with your fan curves to the fans ramp up earlier if it bothers you. Originally posted by Brockenstein:That's pretty normal for a midrange/highend GPU under load.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |