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Little below tjmax. So it’s “ok”. Is it real world temps?

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90*C should be fine, seeing as it's under a pretty strenuous load.

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^-^

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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3 minutes ago, KSores said:

i was running aida 64 so it was under 100% looad

Were you stressing FPU alone? or a different combination?

 

FPU alone will result in higher temps so you might thermal throttle, though you will never see that kind of workload while gaming but it is possible in other scenarios, what's your vCore voltage under load? (Not VID)

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There are arguments that after a certain temp silicon chips can degrade faster, and claims that manufacturer maximums are set so that while it will degrade slowly it may be faster than actually desired by the owner.  Some feel that the manufacturer max temp is fine, and these claims are garbage.  I’ve heard 75c, I’ve heard 85c, I’ve heard “whatever the manufacturer sets it at”

Not a pro, not even very good.  I’m just old and have time currently.  Assuming I know a lot about computers can be a mistake.

 

Life is like a bowl of chocolates: there are all these little crinkly paper cups everywhere.

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Anything under tjmax (100c) for a synthetic stress test is ok and is unlikely to produce temperatures that high during real world usage.

 

Unless you are doing renders etc where your cpu will be at full load constantly, I wouldn't be worried about a high temperature stress test.

 

Let it under 80 in realistic workloads and you probably fine.

Before you reply to my post, REFRESH. 99.99% chance I edited my post. 

 

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4 minutes ago, _Syn_ said:

Were you stressing FPU alone? or a different combination?

 

FPU alone will result in higher temps so you might thermal throttle, though you will never see that kind of workload while gaming but it is possible in other scenarios, what's your vCore voltage under load? (Not VID)

image.png.031a935668552627fab04ecd0ca2c046.png

i set my voltage to 1.375 in my bios

and here is a HWmonitor screenshot image.png.607e86b684ee5d90c8a70bc23d45c56b.png

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10 minutes ago, KSores said:

and here is a HWmonitor screenshot

VID is useless since it's always inaccurate, if you can't see vCore in HWmonitor then try HWiNFO and check "sensors-only" when you run it and it's important to look at vCore at idle and under load so you can see the max and min

 

Have you tried stressing FPU only?

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