Am I crazy to think my CPU hit 95c? idling 37c, gaming 40-65c, rendering 70-80c. prime95 96c.
Peerless assassin 120.
Peerless assassin 120.
Wouldn't matter in the gaming PC market as CPUs are only viable for less than 10 years. Just look at game requirements in the last 5-6 years. I would bet the majority of consumers buying the high end and flagship CPUs are going to replace in a generation or two anyways.Remember, engineering is about designing a product or solution to meet specifications. If those specifications call for a disposable product designed to last 7-10 years, that is what you get. If they were designing a chip to last 25-50 years they would do things very differently.
Yes, that is exactly my point. AMD can afford to have their CPUs run hot knowing that PC hardware rarely gets used very long. As long as they have the efficiency advantage over Intel they have nothing to lose but having to warranty a percentage of chips, assuming people bother.Wouldn't matter in the gaming PC market as CPUs are only viable for less than 10 years. Just look at game requirements in the last 5-6 years. I would bet the majority of consumers buying the high end and flagship CPUs are going to replace in a generation or two anyways.
Yeah, that doesn't mean that those people just throw their "old" systems out the window, they either sell them or keep them for secondary PCs NAS or whatever.Wouldn't matter in the gaming PC market as CPUs are only viable for less than 10 years. Just look at game requirements in the last 5-6 years. I would bet the majority of consumers buying the high end and flagship CPUs are going to replace in a generation or two anyways.
Yeah, we are not talking about hundreds of degrees of difference here, between room temperature and about 100 degrees there will be so little effect of what you say that you can completely disregard it.Higher temperatures mean greater thermal expansion for one. Two, you have increased internal resistance, the higher the temperature the more power you have to push through, so less efficient the warmer it is. Three, chemical and electrochemical reactions work faster at higher temperatures. So anything going on inside the chip at the microscopic level is accelerated. That would be things like electromigration or crystallization effects.
Reputation is extremely important and being known as the one with CPUs that don't last very long will result in people avoiding them.Yes, that is exactly my point. AMD can afford to have their CPUs run hot knowing that PC hardware rarely gets used very long. As long as they have the efficiency advantage over Intel they have nothing to lose but having to warranty a percentage of chips, assuming people bother.
I didn't say that it can be disregarded, I said it can be disregarded by you, by all of us that are just simple users.I wouldn't say it can be disregarded,