The other guy in the Reddit thread who has your exact machine said of simply taking the main side panel off (no box fan) that it was "Not ideal for dust but it lowered temps by at least 20 degrees Celsius." That guy with the CRAZY hair is one of the top tech experts anywhere. I suspect that you haven't followed/read/viewed the Reddit page and YT video that I linked to. The user is dokugami.Ĭan you take the front panel off of the case? That could help even more. I found someone who has already done this work around and the temp lowered 20 degrees. We'll see how much that 1st approximation / work around helps. If you happen to have a box fan, plug it in and point the box fan at the mobo/CPU. take the side panel of the case off (maybe even both sides). Try this and see if it helps your thermal problem. That the temps of your CPU and vid card are crazy high. The loss of CPU speed can be lived with, but it reflects very badly on CyberPowerPC (hand covers face). This is shown in the vid from 10:00 to 11:50. The CPU thermal throttles itself down about 10% because everything is just CRAZY hot. The effect on the CPUs is the same in the vid & in your case. I believe the the PC case in the vid has a sheet of steel instead of the plexiglass that you have. Gamers Nexus calls this a "choked case" situation. Whiskey Tango Foxtrot? In place of that plexiglass your system desperately needs metal mesh screen there that allows air to flow in. You have 2 RGB fans behind a plexiglass front panel. It looks like the source of the cooling problem is the same in the 2 systems. They change these mobos at will and you might have gotten a B550. I believe that you have an B450 mobo, maybe an ASRock. The mobo in the Gamers Nexus vid is actually a bit cheaper than yours, but surprisingly is ever so slightly more advanced than yours. So the airflow in the 2 systems may be designed equally badly. Your CPU cooling problem may or may not be quite as bad as in the vid, but you're likely not hammering the CPU/vid card as hard they are. You don't have some of the problems that they found, but you do have the same CPU cooling problem they found, in spite of the fact that you have a CPU AIO "water cooler" (they don't). They encountered some problems with a Cyberpower prebuilt that's somewhat similar to yours, but slightly cheaper. Watch the Gamers Nexus vid on YouTube the URL below. Just the temps make me a bit nervous when I'm sitting here with the thing under my desk and it makes my leg sweaty. I know there are 2 different types of ram but I made sure the ram voltage was the same and they are both at 3000 speed so everything has been smooth as ice. It's a nice clean build which really impresses me out of the box. Here's a pic of my build so if you can check to see if the stock fans are facing in the right direction, etc. I've tried tweaking settings from Ultra to High to Medium and turning off ray tracing and it doesn't make much of a difference aside from dropping V-Ram usage and making games look uglier. Diablo 3 it hovers around 60cs so it's definitely with graphic intensive games. So far I have NOT reached the max Ryzen Master temps of 90cs which is OK, but I just don't want to fry the CPU. Quick run on a Cold War map and I've gone up to 82cs which is a little better but not much. I was wondering if this was normal behavior for this chip on a build like this? I have since changed to Balanced Power settings in windows 10 and turned off Power Boost in the bios. When I was playing graphic intensive games like Call of Duty Cold War, Cyberpunk, Elder Scrolls Online the cpu can go up to as high as 85cs then shoot back down to 70cs like it's being throttled and self adjusting. I've heard mixed reviews from this company and bad ones from Tech Support, so I figured I'd ask you guys if you think these are normal temps. About a month ago I scored myself a Cyberpower prebuild from Best Buy.
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