[SOLVED] Zotac Rtx 2060 amp run at 80 degree is it normal?

Artifact00

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Jul 22, 2020
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hi as the title said.
is it normal to have 80 degree on gaming while using rtx 2060 zotac amp edition?

here is the spec
3300x ryzen
rtx 2060 zotac amp
team delta 2x8 3000mhz
phanteks p300 2 front intake 1 top out 1 back out

game Code Vein all setting set to the highest as possible and play for 1 hour
gpu running at 97% 79-80 degree
 
Solution
I do protein folding for folding@home 24/7 with both a RTX 2060 and a RTX 2080 in the same case, so I am familiar with trying to keep temperatures down.

I personally have my GPU fans set to ramp up to 100% once GPU temperatures hit 40 degrees. Forty degrees is high enough that the fans kick in as soon as I start doing something GPU intensive (like gaming or folding) without running hard if a GPU is at idle. Obviously this is quite aggressive, but you could do something a bit more conservative with the fans ramping up to 100% at say 60 degrees.

The ability to move air when there is a lot of resistance to airflow involved (called static air pressure) is the issue at hand when it comes to your intake fans. Your exhaust fans don't have...
That's a little bit on the high end; if you want your GPU to run cooler, you could always download MSI afterburner and create a custom fan profile that causes your GPU fans to kick in more aggressively at lower temperatures.

Also, what case fans are you using? It's good that you have two for intake and 2 for exhaust, but depending on how cheap they are, they might not be moving much air. This is especially true of your intake fans seeing as how they need to pull air through a) the small slots in front of your case and b) through the air filter. I myself run with five Noctua NF-A14 140 mm case fans (3 intake, 2 exhaust)
 
That's a little bit on the high end; if you want your GPU to run cooler, you could always download MSI afterburner and create a custom fan profile that causes your GPU fans to kick in more aggressively at lower temperatures.

Also, what case fans are you using? It's good that you have two for intake and 2 for exhaust, but depending on how cheap they are, they might not be moving much air. This is especially true of your intake fans seeing as how they need to pull air through a) the small slots in front of your case and b) through the air filter. I myself run with five Noctua NF-A14 140 mm case fans (3 intake, 2 exhaust)
thanks for the fast reply. i see so this one is a bit hot.
how about i set my fan speed kicking right from the start? i can change it on the bios setting.

for the pc case fan i use local one probably never heard of it. its cube gaming fan 3 in 1. i believe it have 1300rpm.
i think the problem is the case phanteks p300 front panel didnt have a big gap to let the airflow in. what should i do?
 
I do protein folding for folding@home 24/7 with both a RTX 2060 and a RTX 2080 in the same case, so I am familiar with trying to keep temperatures down.

I personally have my GPU fans set to ramp up to 100% once GPU temperatures hit 40 degrees. Forty degrees is high enough that the fans kick in as soon as I start doing something GPU intensive (like gaming or folding) without running hard if a GPU is at idle. Obviously this is quite aggressive, but you could do something a bit more conservative with the fans ramping up to 100% at say 60 degrees.

The ability to move air when there is a lot of resistance to airflow involved (called static air pressure) is the issue at hand when it comes to your intake fans. Your exhaust fans don't have to work as hard because the air moves easily from within the case to outside the case, but your intake fans have to pull a lot harder to get air through the small slots and the filter. I don't have experience with the case fans you mentioned, but they seem to be generic, inexpensive case fans that I doubt move much air.

If you are willing to invest in some better case fans (the best), I'd buy (2) Noctua NF-A14 fans to replace your current intake fans. If you run them at 50%, they are both relatively quiet and move a lot of air at the same time. Here is a link right here
 
Solution
I do protein folding for folding@home 24/7 with both a RTX 2060 and a RTX 2080 in the same case, so I am familiar with trying to keep temperatures down.

I personally have my GPU fans set to ramp up to 100% once GPU temperatures hit 40 degrees. Forty degrees is high enough that the fans kick in as soon as I start doing something GPU intensive (like gaming or folding) without running hard if a GPU is at idle. Obviously this is quite aggressive, but you could do something a bit more conservative with the fans ramping up to 100% at say 60 degrees.

The ability to move air when there is a lot of resistance to airflow involved (called static air pressure) is the issue at hand when it comes to your intake fans. Your exhaust fans don't have to work as hard because the air moves easily from within the case to outside the case, but your intake fans have to pull a lot harder to get air through the small slots and the filter. I don't have experience with the case fans you mentioned, but they seem to be generic, inexpensive case fans that I doubt move much air.

If you are willing to invest in some better case fans (the best), I'd buy (2) Noctua NF-A14 fans to replace your current intake fans. If you run them at 50%, they are both relatively quiet and move a lot of air at the same time. Here is a link right here
okay i will try to:
1. set the gpu fan to kick in on 60 degree.
and if that didnt work
2.i will try open the front panel to check are my fan good enough or not.
lastly
3. need to change the 2 front fan.
are those step okay?
 
after i change the fan curve from msi after burner i got around 71 to 76 on 90% fan speed.

i try set to 100% fan speed too. but its too loud. i think i saw 69 degree if i set to 100% fan speed