Hi!
Here is my problem. I did find similar posts but don't think i found the answer/don't understand it. I have a brand new build with 2600x inside (specs later), which is my first and i count myself a beginner in the world of PC building, overclocking and BIOS navigation (and please treat me as such).
Problem is:
-The CPU core temperature is 40-50 °C when idle, reaching 83 °C during 3DMark tests. (room temperature is 25 °C at most)
-The CPU's core voltage reaching 1,40-1,44V idle and 1,46 during tests.
-The CPU's core clock speed is 2700-4200 MHz on idle and 4,1 MHz during tests.
-The CPU's fan speed is 1900-2300 rpm on idle, up to 2900 during tests. (both are loud)
While i know these all correlate and have to do with the xfr and precision boost stuff, it's still strange for me that at idle i can hear the fans revving and "noise polluting" my ears. (well it's bearable but seems abnormal)
As seen on the picture off CAM the heat fluctuations (and fan speed, clock speed, voltage changing with it) are strangely periodic, and cause the volume of the fan sound to mimic the periodicity.
This all might just be normal after all, but then the noise is still bothersome, considering it's a new PC and the CPU load is minimal. I didn't dare play around with fan curves and such in the BIOS, i don't know how safe that would be. On a side note i accidently touched the pre-applied thermal paste on the cooler, but a fingerprint was hardly even visible, and i wouldn't think that could be reason for all these things.
Any thoughts and help would be appreciated. If any information is missing just ask and i'll provide.
Thanks,
Quirius
Pictures:
https://imgur.com/a/V23DVQb
Specs
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2600x with stock Wraith Spire cooler
MB: Gigabyte B450 Aorus Pro
GPU: Sapphire Radeon RX 590 SE
RAM: 2x8GB Kingston HyperX Predator 3200MHz
SSD: 500GB WD Blue NAND SATA III
PSU: Bitfenix Whisper M 750W
Case: Deepcool Tesseract SW with 1 intake and 1 exhaust fan.
PS: I forgot to mention the only thing i did in BIOS is enabling XMP Profile 1. Thought might be relevant.
Here is my problem. I did find similar posts but don't think i found the answer/don't understand it. I have a brand new build with 2600x inside (specs later), which is my first and i count myself a beginner in the world of PC building, overclocking and BIOS navigation (and please treat me as such).
Problem is:
-The CPU core temperature is 40-50 °C when idle, reaching 83 °C during 3DMark tests. (room temperature is 25 °C at most)
-The CPU's core voltage reaching 1,40-1,44V idle and 1,46 during tests.
-The CPU's core clock speed is 2700-4200 MHz on idle and 4,1 MHz during tests.
-The CPU's fan speed is 1900-2300 rpm on idle, up to 2900 during tests. (both are loud)
While i know these all correlate and have to do with the xfr and precision boost stuff, it's still strange for me that at idle i can hear the fans revving and "noise polluting" my ears. (well it's bearable but seems abnormal)
As seen on the picture off CAM the heat fluctuations (and fan speed, clock speed, voltage changing with it) are strangely periodic, and cause the volume of the fan sound to mimic the periodicity.
This all might just be normal after all, but then the noise is still bothersome, considering it's a new PC and the CPU load is minimal. I didn't dare play around with fan curves and such in the BIOS, i don't know how safe that would be. On a side note i accidently touched the pre-applied thermal paste on the cooler, but a fingerprint was hardly even visible, and i wouldn't think that could be reason for all these things.
Any thoughts and help would be appreciated. If any information is missing just ask and i'll provide.
Thanks,
Quirius
Pictures:
https://imgur.com/a/V23DVQb
Specs
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2600x with stock Wraith Spire cooler
MB: Gigabyte B450 Aorus Pro
GPU: Sapphire Radeon RX 590 SE
RAM: 2x8GB Kingston HyperX Predator 3200MHz
SSD: 500GB WD Blue NAND SATA III
PSU: Bitfenix Whisper M 750W
Case: Deepcool Tesseract SW with 1 intake and 1 exhaust fan.
PS: I forgot to mention the only thing i did in BIOS is enabling XMP Profile 1. Thought might be relevant.