Ok, now we're making some progress.i have a spec 05 case
I’m not having any issue with airflow I’m just wondering because I was running a benchmark and gpu usage was 100% and temp was 83cNo, that's borderline thermal throttling.
What have you done for troubleshooting?
What's the chassis model?
Fan setup?
Ya sure about that?I’m not having any issue with airflow I’m just wondering because I was running a benchmark and gpu usage was 100% and temp was 83c
Do I have to open the card to clean because that would void my warrantyIf you temperature is 83c you have an air flow problem.
Either case ,video card or both.
Remove the side panel and test again.
Do temperatures drop dramatically?
If so, you have a case air flow problem.
If not you have a video card air flow problem.
Make sure the fans and heatsink are clean on the video card.
If clean and temps are still high download msi afterburner and set a custom fan curve to lower temps.
i have a spec 05 case, i took off the side panel and temps only dropped by about 1cIf you temperature is 83c you have an air flow problem.
Either case ,video card or both.
Remove the side panel and test again.
Do temperatures drop dramatically?
If so, you have a case air flow problem.
If not you have a video card air flow problem.
Make sure the fans and heatsink are clean on the video card.
If clean and temps are still high download msi afterburner and set a custom fan curve to lower temps.
it's 31c outside but i have no clue what my room temp is, it starts to throttle at 83c and im doing rainbow six siege benchmark at highest possible graphics, in a normal gaming session it only hits around 77cWhat are your ambient/room temps?
If its 30c or over I'd absolutely expect upto 85c on a 1080, throttling temp is just over 90c so it's still acceptable.
If you're benchmarking then youre obviously forcing usage and temps to their absolute max.
Ingame thats not going to happen unless you force it to, which I'd never run a card 100% usage constantly for the sake of it personally.
Ok, now we're making some progress.i have a spec 05 case
I don't play R6 Siege, but is it even that hard on gpus, even at max?im doing rainbow six siege benchmark at highest possible graphics, in a normal gaming session it only hits around 77c
i think i'll change the thermal paste and then see where the temp stands, if it still is very high i high get a new case. could u recommend a good case that is atx under £100 and how room for multiple hdd's and ssd'sIf it's 31C outside, I wouldn't expect it to be the same temp inside your room - that'd be a little much, wouldn't it?
It's about that outside where I live, but inside, it's 25C - I keep a thermometer in my room.
The temperature of the inside the chassis is also important, because it's going to affect how well the air going into the gpu and cpu coolers will cool components.
Ok, now we're making some progress.
There are a few things that affect gpu cooling, to varying degrees:
1)The chassis' front panel design
This one has the greatest impact. I'm sorry, but people who get chassis with those closed off, or near closed off, front designs without a reasonable intake alternative - like the side intake on the O11 Dynamic, for example - pretty much choose to neglect gpu cooling.
Doesn't affect cpu cooling nearly as much - and it's so #facepalm for me to see them go and liquid cool the cpu, when the gpu would benefit more.
The fancy closed off/near closed off designs which appeal to certain people, are for AESTHETICS, and not actual cooling performance; a proper intake or cooling alternative is necessary to avoid subpar thermals.
2)Psu shrouds
One isn't present in your current chassis, but I'll mention the cons anyway:
-blocks a potential bottom air intake - past the psu and it's cables, at least. It's not much, but it's better than no air.
-proximity to the gpu. The closer the shroud is, the worse it'll be - you know, just like having any fan flush, or near flush, with a solid surface.
I'm aware that some psu shrouds have holes drilled in them, but it's still more restrictive than no psu shroud. Shrouds are there for AESTHETICS, not cooling.
3)Horizontal Vs Vertical gpu orientation
You likely still have your gpu horizontal, but still...
Vertical is generally worse, but can be worked with. Cooling impact can be small to heavy on air cooled models; it screws with the airflow in the PC as well.
More for AESTHETICS than actual cooling performance.
A common pattern going on there, if you've noticed...
How many fans are running in this chassis at the moment, and where? You might be able to brute-force more air through the front with stronger fans, but that does come with the tradeoff of more noise.
I don't play R6 Siege, but is it even that hard on gpus, even at max?
Depending on your gpu's Vbios, the max power limit is either 220w, or 291w, the latter of which will definitely require more effective cooling.
Also, something else that comes to mind, is the thermal paste may have dried up, but if that were the issue, then your gpu would be thermal throttling while playing just about any game... but that's not happening.
To sum up all the above, I think:
-the Spec 05's front intake is weak for gaming graphics cards, which tend to be the hottest devices in those types of systems. [It's so backwards to see people go and liquid cool the cpu in such PCs...]
-your gpu's Vbios is likely the 291w power limit, which would further compound the airflow issue
Therefore, do you go the brute force air route, or a brand new, more airflow friendly, chassis route?
Is there any way I can quickly check if the front panel is the problemIf it's 31C outside, I wouldn't expect it to be the same temp inside your room - that'd be a little much, wouldn't it?
It's about that outside where I live, but inside, it's 25C - I keep a thermometer in my room.
The temperature of the inside the chassis is also important, because it's going to affect how well the air going into the gpu and cpu coolers will cool components.
Ok, now we're making some progress.
There are a few things that affect gpu cooling, to varying degrees:
1)The chassis' front panel design
This one has the greatest impact. I'm sorry, but people who get chassis with those closed off, or near closed off, front designs without a reasonable intake alternative - like the side intake on the O11 Dynamic, for example - pretty much choose to neglect gpu cooling.
Doesn't affect cpu cooling nearly as much - and it's so #facepalm for me to see them go and liquid cool the cpu, when the gpu would benefit more.
The fancy closed off/near closed off designs which appeal to certain people, are for AESTHETICS, and not actual cooling performance; a proper intake or cooling alternative is necessary to avoid subpar thermals.
2)Psu shrouds
One isn't present in your current chassis, but I'll mention the cons anyway:
-blocks a potential bottom air intake - past the psu and it's cables, at least. It's not much, but it's better than no air.
-proximity to the gpu. The closer the shroud is, the worse it'll be - you know, just like having any fan flush, or near flush, with a solid surface.
I'm aware that some psu shrouds have holes drilled in them, but it's still more restrictive than no psu shroud. Shrouds are there for AESTHETICS, not cooling.
3)Horizontal Vs Vertical gpu orientation
You likely still have your gpu horizontal, but still...
Vertical is generally worse, but can be worked with. Cooling impact can be small to heavy on air cooled models; it screws with the airflow in the PC as well.
More for AESTHETICS than actual cooling performance.
A common pattern going on there, if you've noticed...
How many fans are running in this chassis at the moment, and where? You might be able to brute-force more air through the front with stronger fans, but that does come with the tradeoff of more noise.
I don't play R6 Siege, but is it even that hard on gpus, even at max?
Depending on your gpu's Vbios, the max power limit is either 220w, or 291w, the latter of which will definitely require more effective cooling.
Also, something else that comes to mind, is the thermal paste may have dried up, but if that were the issue, then your gpu would be thermal throttling while playing just about any game... but that's not happening.
To sum up all the above, I think:
-the Spec 05's front intake is weak for gaming graphics cards, which tend to be the hottest devices in those types of systems. [It's so backwards to see people go and liquid cool the cpu in such PCs...]
-your gpu's Vbios is likely the 291w power limit, which would further compound the airflow issue
Therefore, do you go the brute force air route, or a brand new, more airflow friendly, chassis route?
Like I said earlier, you won't see a significant change unless the card was throttling to begin with, and you don't see that in game from what you've reported so far.i think i'll change the thermal paste and then see where the temp stands
Yes.Is there any way I can quickly check if the front panel is the problem
i have purchased a new case (h510i) and am going to give my gpu and deep clean aswell as some new thermal paste, do you think doing all this will solve my heating issuesLike I said earlier, you won't see a significant change unless the card was throttling to begin with, and you don't see that in game from what you've reported so far.
Yes.
Remove the front, side and top panels.
Play your games and record the max temp.
Play the benchmark(s) again and record the max temp.
If the gpu is getting a reasonable amount of airflow, you should not be seeing more than 5C difference in max temps.
Thermal limit for those cards was 83°C so it's definitely a strong possibility to hit that at 100% usage especially in a poor airflow setup.My Msi 1080 gaming x goes to 83c when at 100% usage, is this normal for my card?
are you sure? does it make airflow worse if i add front fans ?Thermal limit for those cards was 83°C so it's definitely a strong possibility to hit that at 100% usage especially in a poor airflow setup.
Paste can help, for a gpu I'd suggest Arctic MX-4.
With the nzxt H510 series, do not use an intake fan, just use the stock fan at rear exhaust and the second fan at top-rear. You'll get better gpu temps that way.
Make sure the fans are all blowing in the same direction - front to back usually - use a piece of tissue paper to determine which direction the fan blows if you are unsure.are you sure? does it make airflow worse if i add front fans ?
so would my pc be cooler if i just didn't add any intake fanshttps://www.gamersnexus.net/hwreviews/3309-nzxt-h500-case-review-thermals-noise-vs-s340
CPU Torture
That's delta T over ambient in the chart, not actual temperature.
"Starting with torture tests and the NZXT H500-only data, average CPU temperature was 61 degrees Celsius over ambient in the torture test and with the stock fan configuration. Again, as a reminder, that’s dual-exhaust. Removing the unnecessary top filter lowered that to 57.3 degrees. It’s a good thing NZXT included the filter so that it could be used in top intake configurations, but if the stock (exhaust) fan layout is used it should definitely be removed. We left the filter in place for all other tests since that’s how the case ships. Adding a 140mm intake fan to the uppermost of the front mounts lowered CPU temperature barely more than removing the filter did, down to 56.5C, while moving both 120mm fans to the front intake slots was equivalent to removing the filter at 57.2 degrees. Exhaust-only may not be the best stock configuration, but it does leave more room for CLC options in the front."GPU Torture
Again, delta T over ambient, not actual temperature.
"Average GPU temperature in the torture test was 52.4 degrees Celsius with the stock fan configuration, and 53C with the top filter removed, a minor change within margin of error. Interestingly, temperature went up quite a bit with the 140mm intake fan added, up to 59.3C and 58.9C with the 120mm fans moved to front intake. This is where the the stock fan configuration starts to make sense. NZXT chose negative pressure because this allows the GPU to draw air in through empty expansion slots, rather than relying on intake from the mostly-sealed front of the case. When front intake fans are added, even ones pointing towards the GPU, this airflow pattern is disrupted and the GPU can no longer pull cool air in from behind the case."
so do you recommend i don't put any more fans in and that i just leave it as stock?The gpu would be cooler, the cpu wouldn't, but the gpu is the hotter part of the 2 anyway...