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Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
I have recently bought a 8320 chip and although its running ok in temp around mid 40s under stress i would like to lower it a bit.
Now i have a Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro Rev 2 CPU Cooler which i have lost my temper with and thrown out, it comes with like a million parts and is almost impossible to clip onto the socket on the board unless u have 4 or more hands. What i want is a simple fan that has a similar clip to the stock fan and doesn't come with a million pieces. Can someone recommend one please? Thanks. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
I managed to fit mine to an AMD socket the other day without help. It comes with 2 parts one for either side and 2 screws for AMD so hardly a million you can easily fit these loosely they then clip to the retention clips and tighten the screws simple
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Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
Try it after a stroke and your right side not working correctly.
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Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
if you do it how I did you will be able to.
All multi coolers will need you to do something like this you will need a dedicated AMD cooler |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
Don't bother. Mid 40's under stress is already an unusually low CPU temperature.
Most operate at 50-60 under stress and are designed to work forever at 70-90'c. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
right with help and watching youtube videos i changed the stock CPU to the Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro Rev 2 CPU Cooler.
Its brought the temp down from 57-61* to 49-53*c im using the heat compound that was with the fan. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
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As the temps you mentioned would scare the bejesus out of me. I'm running a AMD X6 1035T and even after a hearty game session i never get any higher than 38-40'c on stock air cooling. Right now, i'm sitting idle at 15'c in quite a warm room. https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2014/05/19.png |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
No im nothing GPU im thinking CPU.
Currently now room has cooled down 46*c |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
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Your CPU temp should come down a little in a week or so. And don't worry about the temps you are seeing. The chip(FX8320) you have tends to run a little high due to the 8 cores. AMD quote a max safe temp of 62'c but of course the cooler it is the longer life you will get. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
I really dont think Bios is reading Temp Correctly.
Bios says 62*c Clickbios in windows says 53*c Coretemp says 35*c Just checked MSI control center that lets u overclock in windows and thats only showing temp of CPU at 47*c where Click Bios is 52*c and they are reading from the same board and chip. Things are not adding up. I do have some Akasa 455 thermal compound here if it needs changing. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
The 8320's are hot chips and it's down to the voltages etc on them, it makes me laugh these days as chips are getting hotter and hotter when they should be getting cooler.
Thermal paste should be Artic MX4 or Noctua NTH-1, as they are the best you can get without going for stupidly expensive better by 2c stuff, like the Ice Diamond stuff. Temp monitoring software is always a issue with AMD cpus, as most pick the temp up for the first core and replicate it across all the cores, but the best one iirc is Hardware Monitor. Coolers will be difficult to fit, but the best ones out there for your chip if you want to stick with air are: 1: Phanteks 2: Noctua NHD-14 3: Noctua NHD-15 4: Be Quiet Dark Rock If you really want to drop the temps though then you would be looking at either a Corsair H80i or H100i. Any of those coolers might be abit tricky to fit given your situation but you could always, ask someone who knows what they are doing to do it for you or take it to a local computer shop, as ask them how much they would want to fit it. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
I think you should just stop worrying about it unless it becomes an issue
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Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
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Still at least when it's hot like today the cpu doesn't hit over 60c even when overclocked to 4.6ghz. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
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Perhaps you're just paranoid. Intel clearly specify a maximum CPU casing temperature of above 70'c on most processors. 15'c idle in a "warm room" is impossible on air cooling. You would have to be using refrigerated compressant or a peltier to reach that low. A "warm room" is 20-25'c and you cannot get any temperature lower than room temperature with conventional cooling methods. Advanced datacentres and servers these days are designed around an ambient air temperature of up to 35'c. The numbers you state bear no resemblance to reality. ---------- Post added at 20:23 ---------- Previous post was at 20:16 ---------- Quote:
Note that BIOS and core temperatures are not measuring the same thing. The core will likely vary between being the hottest and the coolest part of the processor depending on what you're doing. ---------- Post added at 20:26 ---------- Previous post was at 20:23 ---------- Quote:
That's mostly now dropped, a few years ago 95w became mainstream with high-end being around 130w (e.g. 1st/2nd gen i7), most recently last year's Intel architectures reduced mainstream power consumption to 55-65w and 80-90w in the performance segment. AMD have been behind pretty much the entire decade both in terms of power efficiency and TDP. ---------- Post added at 20:26 ---------- Previous post was at 20:26 ---------- Quote:
Any temperature below 60'c is not an issue. It's impossible to even set the temperature target or alarm below 65'c on my desktop motherboard! The only options are 65, 70, 75, 80, or 85. On my server, one of the most power efficient (and coolest idle) CPUs available is idling at 39'c. The non-critical high temperature alarm is set at 91'c and cannot be changed. ---------- Post added at 20:38 ---------- Previous post was at 20:26 ---------- Quote:
(Although I know some non-CPU chips in modern phones are rated at 120'c-140'c) The maximum temperatures listed in spec sheets and in BIOS alarms are already highly conservative. The only time reduced temperatures will affect reliability or lifetime is during moderate to extreme overclocking. Also remember all modern processors have built-in safety mechanisms that throttle or power off the processor if temperatures reach anywhere near dangerous. These are built-in the core hardware and cannot be turned off, and are specifically there to prevent any temperature induced damage. In some cases it'd still be entirely safe to run the CPU with the heatsink removed entirely. Though it'd be pretty damn slow. |
Re: Replacing Stock AMD Processor Fan
Don't forget, that in a multi-core chip, each core could be a wildly different temperature.
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