![]() ![]() The H80i V2 is up front with dual fans shooting air along the bottom of the chassis which is blocked by the GPU (~80% wall), so most of the air flows along the bottom of the chassis and out, but sadly, the hoses are right in it's path, so it too is also affecting performance that way (shame I couldn't mount that upside down, but it wasn't possible as the GPU and the hoses hit 100% and there was no logical method of putting the hosing in without some serious bends and the tension on the mount would have been violent). I'm noticing that same issue with my 6700K and the H80i V2, the rad hoses go right past the GPU at the bottom of the case and over top of the GPU (1050Ti-OC), the heat down at the bottom of the case is all the GPU and pump fan output as the temp creating chips are above the GPU and aren't being affected by any internal fans aside from the one up top pulling only chassis air out. Definitely seems like it's the GPU waste heat affecting the coolant temp and not the CPU usage as I had thought. You take a penalty for having a high coolant temp, but it does not mean you are in danger. However, that extra 15C+ of coolant adds 15C to his CPU temperature as well. He can't make it colder and no his system won't fail. On the other hand, if your case is 39C like the guy in the thread, then it means nothing. However, if you were starting a typical room temperature (for PC labs) of 20-23C, then that would represent a +17C coolant gain. Some of this is addressed in the thread, but the supposed max coolant temp of 40C is not a fail point. Your CPU will go to 50-60-70C and it's fine. This person has some environmental issues to address, but it is the same CPU and cooler for some perspective.ĭon't worry about this. Have a quick look at A-D in post 2 in the following thread. ![]()
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