![]() |
| Register | |||||||
| Overclocking, Cooling & Modding Come on in and find out how to keep your babies cooler, run faster, and show off your modded cases! |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| Getting there Join Date: 18 Aug 2007
Posts: 167
Reputation: 249 ![]() ![]() ![]() Rep Power: 4 | I was curious just how much room temperature can affect the temperature of the PC. I chose to look at the CPU since Speedfan can monitor and log temps for each of the 4 cores in my Q6600, and since of all the components, the CPU is probably the most sensitive to changes in air temp. since mine is air cooled. Anyway, I did the same x264.exe encode that I have been doing for all my temperature comparisons and monitored room temp. with a calibrated digital thermometer at several points during each encode. These were averaged and graphed against the averaged reported core temp* values from Speedfan for the entire second pass of a 2-pass x264 encode of the same video file. I was happy to see that for the different room temps used, the increases were pretty linear (certainly within error). Result: You can see by the slopes of the regression line that every delta °F of room temp. affected the average core temp by about 0.8 °C and for your Celsius folks, every delta °C of room temp. affected the average core temp by about 1-1/2 °C. So what does this mean and why do you care? Well, using these rules of thumb, if it's currently 70 °F in your room, and your average load core temp is 65 °C, you can expect that to change by roughly 0.8 °C for every single °F your room temp. change. Say your room hits 80 °F. Your load core temp should increase from 65 to 73 °C which may be unacceptable to you and you might want to adjust your o/c accordingly. This is just an approximation based on my system. Your mileage may vary... *The numbers I used are equivalent to those collected by TAT or RMClock: these temps are core temps. As I understand it, TJunction never changes and is a fixed value for a given chip. The Quads get a values of 100 °C and the duals get 85 °C. The core temp is defined as: Code: Core temp = TJunction - DTS Example, DTS reads 62. You take 100-62=38 and your core temp is 38 °C. Raw data and graphs Hardware specs: Q6600 (lapped) @ 9x333, Ultra-120 Extreme (lapped), P5B-Del., P182 case w/ 4 fans on low, Corsair 620HX, Ballistix DDR2-800 @ 4-4-4-12 (1:1 Mem:CPU). ![]() Raw data table in case you want the individual points: ![]() Downloads and References To download crystalCPUID: http://crystalmark.info/software/Cry...D/index-e.html To download rmclock: http://cpu.rightmark.org/products/rmclock.shtml To download speedfan: http://www.almico.com/speedfan.php To download TAT: http://www.techpowerup.com/downloads/392/mirrors.php |
| | |
| SPONSOR |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| get more vcore under load: vdroop pencil mod (pics) | graysky | Overclocking, Cooling & Modding | 4 | 12th Nov 2007 08:40 AM |
| The ATI Radeon To ATI FireGL Mod Guide! | Chai | Reviews & Articles | 601 | 8th Sep 2007 09:52 AM |