Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : 72C
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I keep all my GPUs at 72C or below. Most of them are at 72C because I feel this is the perfect balance between speed, noise and longevity of the GPU itself. If you think this is too hot let me know, I would like these GPUs to make it at least a couple more years. Most are GK104 and GM2xx. | |
ID: 45954 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! | |
ID: 45955 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! What do you keep your GPUs at? | |
ID: 45956 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! I will let mine run up to 86c if no errors. If the hardware is good you'll find they can cope and they'll likely be redundant long before they fail. | |
ID: 45957 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! Ah I had a card that I ran at 80C all the time and it recently failed so I'm a bit more conscientious about that now. It started artifacting on screen and erroring out every WU I gave it. | |
ID: 45958 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! My triple Slot Palit Gamerock 1080 and Jetstream 1070 normally regulate to 65°C but I have underclocked them a little in order to maintain 55-60°C. Just because I run them 24/7 but want the cards to last very long even so. 80°C is the ceiling limit in my humble opinion as the temperature is not evenly distributed on the board and the sensor having a deviation from "reality". I therefore recommend <70°C for permanent load. My Pascals cool down by respectable 5°C just from a 20MHz reduction already. So you don't lose a lot of speed because of that. ____________ I would love to see HCF1 protein folding and interaction simulations to help my little boy... someday. | |
ID: 45959 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Definitely NOT too hot! That maybe true but doesn't prove the card failed because it ran at 80c. Temperature is only part of the equation. You can reach max overclock without reaching max temperature. | |
ID: 45960 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ah I had a card that I ran at 80C all the time and it recently failed so I'm a bit more conscientious about that now. It started artifacting on screen and erroring out every WU I gave it. Artifacts = sounds like this GPU needs some new reballing. Temperature certainly is a crucial factor for aging, however the capacitors are normally more sensitive to temperature than the chip. Which one is affected if I may ask you this question? ____________ I would love to see HCF1 protein folding and interaction simulations to help my little boy... someday. | |
ID: 45961 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ah I had a card that I ran at 80C all the time and it recently failed so I'm a bit more conscientious about that now. It started artifacting on screen and erroring out every WU I gave it. Two actually. My friend's 980ti of which two of the 3 fans fell off while he was computing and the temps sat in the mid to high 80s for a few months. It recently whitescreened every time it got a load. He is RMAing that. And my 280x with an MSI cooler which has thermal pads on the RAM and VRMs and MOSFETs. Also what do you mean by new reballing? | |
ID: 45962 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
An example for (home) reballing... | |
ID: 45963 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
An example for (home) reballing... This is why I wish GPUs were socketed | |
ID: 45964 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Well ... and that is why Nvidia and AMD don't do that. | |
ID: 45965 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : 72C