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Hi, 

 

Recently I bought a new CPU case from Cooler Master. It's Cooler Master MASTERBOX 5t. My previous one was a normal case from space brand. The problem is when I play COD:MW Remastered in my newly bought case, my GPU quickly getting hotter. And due to that cause, my newly bought case's side panel also gets hotter.  I usually play in 1080p resolution. The temperature goes up to 70° celsius after a 10-15 minutes of playing COD:MW Remastered in the new case I bought named Cooler Master MASTERBOX 5t. And I didn't try to play more than that time cause I don't want to burn my GPU. But I played COD: MW Remastered hours after hours with the same components in my old case, It didn't get that hotter. It is cool with my old case. But for my PC components, the old case is too small to hold these things conveniently. That's why I bought this new case. 

 

My PC Configuration is:

 

CPU: Intel Core i5-6500 CPU @ 3.20Hz 
RAM: 8GB
GPU: AMD Radeon R7 360 2GB
HDD: 1TB Wertern Digital
Mainboard: MSI B150M MORTAR ARCTIC (MS-7A45)

 

 

I am running Windows 10 Pro edition.


 

My new case got one fan in front of the case and another fan in the back. So a total of 2 fans. I can add 2 more fans to the front. But I can't understand why the older case don't get hotter during the extreme gameplay and why being bigger than the older case and the good cable management, it's getting hotter and hotter. I've attached some photos of my new case below:

 

 

 

 

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Please help. Any help will be much appreciated. Thanks.

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Okay

47 minutes ago, Obersachse said:

70°C is normal for a regular GPU, no reason to worry unless it starts smoking and burning spectacularly.

Yeah. But I think the temperature will rise from 70°C if I play more. Cause I stopped playing when I noticed the 70°C and my PC started getting hotter. I did the benchmarking test for the GPU too. It shows the same temperature from the torture benchmarking. A well known guy to me told I have to buy a radiator with water block means a liquid cooler for CPU and GPU. I didn't equip any liquid cooler and radiator in this newly bought case. And I don't wish to buy the liquid cooling system and the radiator for this case cause it's very expensive and I can't afford that much cost. Can I run my PC with my newly bought Cooler Master MASTERBOX 5t ignoring the overheating I'm experiencing now? Or should I stick to my old case but the old case seems very small to fit all of my components into it. Or should I buy two or three more additional fans to equip these fans on the new case to get more airflow into the new case? So what should I do?

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8 minutes ago, Mahmudul Hasan said:

Okay

Yeah. But I think the temperature will rise from 70°C if I play more. Cause I stopped playing when I noticed the 70°C and my PC started getting hotter. I did the benchmarking test for the GPU too. It shows the same temperature from the torture benchmarking. A well known guy to me told I have to buy a radiator with water block means a liquid cooler for CPU and GPU. I didn't equip any liquid cooler and radiator in this newly bought case. And I don't wish to buy the liquid cooling system and the radiator for this case cause it's very expensive and I can't afford that much cost. Can I run my PC with my newly bought Cooler Master MASTERBOX 5t ignoring the overheating I'm experiencing now? Or should I stick to my old case but the old case seems very small to fit all of my components into it. Or should I buy two or three more additional fans to equip these fans on the new case to get more airflow into the new case? So what should I do?

You're not experiencing overheating. My GPU never goes higher than 77C, it's a fine temperature.

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Your temps are fine.  Especially if it's a reference design.  Your GPU is going to get up there regardless of the airflow in your case.

12 minutes ago, Mahmudul Hasan said:

A well known guy to me told I have to buy a radiator with water block means a liquid cooler for CPU and GPU.

HAHA.  On an r7 360?  Either the dude had no idea what he was saying or you took his comments out of context.  Don't worry about it bro.  As long as you can put up with the noise of the fan I wouldn't worry.

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49 minutes ago, Biggerboot said:

Your temps are fine.  Especially if it's a reference design.  Your GPU is going to get up there regardless of the airflow in your case.

HAHA.  On an r7 360?  Either the dude had no idea what he was saying or you took his comments out of context.  Don't worry about it bro.  As long as you can put up with the noise of the fan I wouldn't worry.

I think so. 

53 minutes ago, K0MP4CT said:

You're not experiencing overheating. My GPU never goes higher than 77C, it's a fine temperature.

Okay. But The most irritating thing I'm experiencing is the back cover/side cover of the case also starts to heat reflecting the GPU's heat. And the heat is on this specific side of the case. The other sides are okay but this side over the GPU.

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2 hours ago, Mahmudul Hasan said:

Okay. But The most irritating thing I'm experiencing is the back cover/side cover of the case also starts to heat reflecting the GPU's heat. And the heat is on this specific side of the case. The other sides are okay but this side over the GPU.

Should I worry about the above sentences, buds?

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6 hours ago, Mahmudul Hasan said:

Should I worry about the above sentences, buds?

Is the air itself blowing out of the case hot?  Or is it just your side panel?

 

My guess is that youre probably feeling the air coming from your CPU cooler on your side panel (if you have a stock cooler installed).  Don't worry about it if that's the case, the CPU is going to blow hot air when under load.

 

Disregard that, the stock cooler usually 'pulls' air not push.

You could check your ambient temps with hwmonitor if youre worried, but I think you're ok.  

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1 hour ago, Biggerboot said:

Is the air itself blowing out of the case hot?  Or is it just your side panel?

 

My guess is that youre probably feeling the air coming from your CPU cooler on your side panel (if you have a stock cooler installed).  Don't worry about it if that's the case, the CPU is going to blow hot air when under load.

 

Disregard that, the stock cooler usually 'pulls' air not push.

You could check your ambient temps with hwmonitor if youre worried, but I think you're ok.  

Yeah I have a stock cooler installed over my CPU. So, I discovered that my old case got some tiny holes I mean maybe more than 40 tiny holes on it's side cover which is above the CPU position and I think the stock CPU cooler pulls air and blows the heat from the processor. And the hot airs just get out through the tiny holes outside the case. Maybe that's why my old case's side panel doesn't get that much heat. But the newer case got no holes on it's side panel. Maybe that's why the hot airs doesn't get out from the case. What do you think?

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5 minutes ago, Mahmudul Hasan said:

Yeah I have a stock cooler installed over my CPU. So, I discovered that my old case got some tiny holes I mean maybe more than 40 tiny holes on it's side cover which is above the CPU position and I think the stock CPU cooler pulls air and blows the heat from the processor. And the hot airs just get out through the tiny holes outside the case. Maybe that's why my old case's side panel doesn't get that much heat. But the newer case got no holes on it's side panel. Maybe that's why the hot airs doesn't get out from the case. What do you think?

Each case and airflow configuration is a little bit different, so something like this you can usually figure out yourself practically.  Observe your temps and feel if the air being exhausted is hot/cool during load.  Observe your cpu/gpu temps (which you have) and the system temps.

 

In the meantime I think you'll be fine.  You can always get more fans for airflow.

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