The same thing was happening with my GPU so I underclocked and undervolted it to hell using msi afterburner and now instead of getting 85 C during gaming sessions it’s around 70 C. my CPU fan is always loud. i think the thermal paste is gone. I’m not willing to take my computer apart because where my computer is it’s really awkward and if it bricks itself i have the money to buy a new one. rn the package temp is idling at 46-55 C, jumping every second. min temp is 45 C. the max temp is 80 C idling according to hwmonitor. i’m getting spikes in high temperature that last a second or so but when I’m playing a game it can spike to 95-100 C

UPDATE: Disabled Boost and undervolted my CPU, now temp spikes are much more reasonable. Max idle temp after 1 hour according to hwmonitor is 53 C which is a lot better than random spikes to 80 C lol. thx to everyone who commented!

  • @WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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    71 day ago

    Make sure you’re grounding yourself by touching the metal case frequently.

    the case will only ground you until you disconnect the power, which you probably should do before doing things in there. for your safety, and for when a screw falls to the wrong place

    • Ground is a very relative concept in electronics. You are correct about earth ground, but if the case is unplugged and you touch it, you are still grounding yourself to chassis ground. Chassis ground is the important one for this since the danger isn’t electrocution (assuming the PC is unplugged) but electrostatic discharge (ESD) that can damage components.

      This is still a massive simplification of the concept of ground.

      • @WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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        31 day ago

        but is it enough that way to touch the case frequently? I thought you would need to touch it constantly while touching things inside

        • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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          51 day ago

          Good enough! You only need to discharge any static your currently (heh) carrying. Unless you’re rolling around on the carpet in an arid room, you’ll be fine.

          When you shock yourself on a doorknob, notice how you don’t get shocked again?

          • @WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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            21 day ago

            ok, but where do you discharge that static electricity to? where does it go? or is it more about “dispersing it” so that both you and the case and everything inside have roughly the same amount?

            When you shock yourself on a doorknob, notice how you don’t get shocked again?

            yeah true, probably it is about dispersing it. didn’t really think about this much before

            • Nougat
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              41 day ago

              I believe - and @shalafi@lemmy.world will correct me if I’m wrong - that as long as the static charge differential between you and the equipment is low enough, there’s no concern about damaging static electricity flow through components. Touching the case, even if it’s not earth grounded, will discharge any potential you’re holding into the case. Then the difference between you and the components will be small enough to be safe.

            • @Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              1 day ago

              I assume it goes into the case (that’s one of the reasons why the motherboard had standoff screws), and will discharge when the case is plugged back ?

        • Sabata
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          31 day ago

          If your worried you can get a wrist band that attaches you to the case/ground for a few dollars. You really just need to touch something that would discharge the static before grabbing a part. The real risk is everything in the PC is bloodthirsty and wants to cut you.

          • Case
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            22 hours ago

            I joked about blood on my soundcard at an IT job.

            Because yes, I managed to cut myself installing a sound card.

            The younger guys were just like, “Sound card?”

            Unless you really need something specific, the stuff built into mobos is fine these days.

            • Sabata
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              218 hours ago

              The PC generally won’t boot till you pay the blood toll.