As such, I figured it was coming from left of the cooler - chipset. It is above and a smidge to the left of the cpu cooler head. There is definitely a 'fan' like noise up at the top left where the chipset is. Now I just need to figure out fucking network file sharing and getting Lightroom working (or running a virtual machine to maybe cancel the old build's install). Many thanks to all for looking at stuff I would never have really figured out and giving comfort that things are likely operating as they realistically should. I could probably knock a couple decibels off if I attached the front glass plate but I don't like it so it will stay 'open' as is. Thus far, the only system negative (as opposed to abode/microsoft issues) is that it is indeed a smidge louder than my Noctua's on the 4790k (and I'd wager that a BeQuiet on it would be less noise than the NXZT aio). Might make me epeen a tiny bit bigger?Īt this juncture from the other thread on ram speed (that seems likely better to leave along at an 18 rather than a 17 timing), the 'base' system I think I can say is 'complete'. I might do the memtest thing for chuckles but having watched P95 using basically 85-99% for hours with no crashes, I don't think it will tell me anything. I don't overclock, I want stability at the maximum speed I can get stock (which is why I try and but the fastest stock parts I can). I have no foreseeable work that is going to max these cores out for any length of time - definitely not to the extent that P95 or the Realbench things will do (which I have let run for a couple hours now non stop). I had threw out the amd/cooler box but went and got them back thinking 'fuck, do I have to return something'. I was half wondering if I had a cooling problem (with the aio) or a chip problem (with a bent pin or poor connection or shit part). You folks don't know what a relief this is. With P95 going, both modes will go to 2700/1600 (in both performance and silent mode). No load performance setting goes to 2350/1200. Silent no load is say 2100rpm at the pump and 800rpm at the radiator fans. NZXTcam has a cooling section, I was in silent at the onset but it seems silent gets overridden when things get hot. Ram has no temperature sensors - but it wasn't hot to the touch on the heat spreader I could touch (the advantage of an open case cough cough you know who you are!). Liquid temp started at 30c, went to 32c, never moved. Memory usage went to 99% but did a drop down to 85% for maybe a couple minutes after say 5 mins and then went back to 99% but eventually settled back down at 85% - the cpu was staying pegged 33%/4.35ghz. CPU went to around 33% and stayed there at call it 4.35ghz for certainly longer than 10 mins while I was watching. Don't want a crash mid 6 hour copy!Įdit - did a little dicking around while waiting for the file transfer. I will give another go at a run once this huge file copy is done to an old scsi hardrive (backing up 850gig of photos over a slow usb toaster). I can use the nzxtcam to switch and see fluid temp while using it - switching from cpu/gpu to liquid temp would show me what is or isn't going on with the liquid (currently, liquid is sitting at 29c in a room ambient around 21c I'd say).ĭownloaded HWinfo.holy mother, that is a lot of 'information' to someone knowing what they are looking for. Are the VRMs getting too warm? (very unlikely but you never know) Is it power throttling? etc etc. Have you changed anything about the power limit in your UEFI, or any of the current settings?Īs mentioned above I'd get HWInfo64 installed so you can see what else is happening with your system while all this is going on. What are the AIO fans doing while this is all going on? By the time the CPU starts to throttle they should be running as fast as you want them to run (presumably you can set this with the CAM software than NZXT make?) Seems strange for the CPU to come off 100% utilisation though, when you've got 32 threads running. That said, going all the way down to 3GHz seems a lot lower than I'd expect, and 50C isn't hot.Īlso bear in mind that P95 does have different levels of "difficulty" depending what stress test mode you set it to, so this can change the heat output. Something that will be happening is that the liquid in your AIO is warming up, which stops it being able to cool the CPU so effectively, meaning it drops clocks.
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