Left is idle, right is under full gaming load (Helldivers 2). My previous rig (Intel) easily went up to 85-90°C in the same circumstances. Ambient temps are slightly elevated as well since we’ve been having ~30°C temps daily here for a while now.

To me this is almost ridiculous. I had never dreamed I could get my temps under load under 70. CPU is at stock speed since there is literally no reason to push it any further at this point. Can always choose to up the clocks later if I still want to.

Cooler is a Noctua NH-D15 G2. I don’t see myself returning to watercooling any time soon. And Noctua has a new customer for life.

    • @orbitz@lemmy.ca
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      018 days ago

      I like the AIOs cause the fans don’t sound like they’re lifting an aircraft carrier. I’m more conscious of noise cause my gaming PC is near to the main tv so don’t want my gf to be inconvenienced when she is watching TV, I suppose I could get a lower sound fan that’d do it well (haven’t really looked at options for years) but most of them sounded loud when I switched and I like my toys too, though I swear my previous version was making a whining noise for awhile (pump I think) but long since upgraded since I forgot to check radiator size one case upgrade.

        • @dmention7@lemm.ee
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          018 days ago

          Huh, I have a Fractal Design AIO that’s several years old at this point, and I cannot hear the water pump unless I literally stick my head in the case and ramp the speed up and down. I just leave it at 100% full time.

        • @orbitz@lemmy.ca
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          118 days ago

          Haven’t checked out many of their reviews I’ll keep them in mind, at first I had them confused with guru3d who seem to come up often for parts reviews. I always like to find the worst points of a few reviews then if they don’t seem too bad maybe the product is acceptable heh. Though you do need a handful to check for sure.

          • warm
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            118 days ago

            It’s good practice to check multiple reviews. GamersNexus has very good reviews though, if I ever had to place my trust in just one review it would be theirs.

  • warm
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    318 days ago

    Noctua is fantastic, their products are well worth the asking price. They are the only fans I will ever buy.

    The NH-D15 performs as well/better as most 240mm radiators. More than that though and liquid coolers are still king, especially when paired with Noctua fans.

    (Oh and Noctua are developing an AIO, well a pump-less one)

    • borari
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      218 days ago

      Yeah I was gonna say I have a custom loop and Noctua fans, it blows the shit out of an AIO or an air cooler. Plus my GPU is under water also so there’s no gpu fan noise either.

    • @mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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      118 days ago

      I’m switching to Linux soon, and I’ll probably have to swap my NZXT cooler out for a tower cooler since their shitty control software won’t work

  • @RobotZap10000@feddit.nl
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    218 days ago

    That’s the Noctua experience all right. 2-3x as expensive as most other options, but DAMN do they make great fans.

  • lazynooblet
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    117 days ago

    I just got a new rig last week. I got the 9800x3d instead of the 9950x3d as it is exclusively for gaming. Also got the DH15 G2. Really happy with it and it’s so quiet!

  • @terraborra@lemmy.nz
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    118 days ago

    I did the same when I rebuilt with a 9800x3d. It’s so nice not having to worry about the pump or aging parts that might leak. No gurgling sounds on startup.

    I used the Thermalright Frost Spirit 140 as it was quite a bit cheaper than Noctua which used to be my go to.

  • jonathan
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    018 days ago

    I ditched air cooling because of the sound of the fans ramping up and down whenever I did anything briefly intensive, like installing a package.

    • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      218 days ago

      Needs some hysteresis. Something most custom fan speed curves lack is a hysteresis option. Basically for short loads don’t ramp the fans up to full blast just because the CPU got hot for 0.5 seconds. Liquid coolers aren’t immune to this either. If the pump speed is low then it has to start ramping up. And pump noise equally drives me insane.

      Like OP said Noctua fans are basically magic. I have mine set with a very not aggressive curve and hysteresis so I rarely notice them ramp up and down.

      • warm
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        118 days ago

        Yeah, you can leave them set pretty high and they basically make no noise. No point having them drop super low, or go super high, as they push a lot of air for the noise they make. With a good hysteresis function, as you say, hardly ever hear them ramping.

    • @Kyrgizion@lemmy.worldOP
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      218 days ago

      That was my initial reason to go with an AIO. But this Noctua is damn silent. Its “ramping up” is a gentle whirr. An AIO’s pump is generally about as loud.

    • @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      18 days ago

      Thats an issue with how your fan curves are set up more than the cooler type. Not enough hysteresis and ramp smoothing.

      Its also just less obnoxious with a good air cooler that’s still fairly quiet at 100% fans.