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Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
I undusted my PC a week ago (when it wouldn't boot up at all), but I don't have a can of air. Will blowing help?
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Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
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Since your cpu is running at 60 C, I would check the heatsink goooey first. Should be an easy unclip or a couple of screws. It would be killer if you took a pic of your opened desktop, just to see what your setup looks like space wise. Mid-tower I suppose? My gaming rig from 2002 haha, was having an overheating problem, and like KG said, if you're software adjusting your fans and have made sure that your fan blades/shroud don't have grimey dust(sometimes dust build up can jam up a fan..but you don't seem like the neglectful fellow),, then check the thermal paste. Heatsinks aren't supposed to fail are they? I mean, it's just dissipating heat, so if there's conductivity between the cpu plate and the heatsink, it should be working as long as your h.s. fan is still whirring. I'm not even sure if this makes sense, but check your power supply too. Is it top mounted? Sometimes topmounted PSU's can cause heat trap issues. Is your desktop sitting with good airflow around it? And, is your running temperature actually higher than before or are you guessing that the heat's increased. You might want to consider your room's temperature as well, since sometimes us northerners crank up the heat when it's -bitch C winter outside. |
Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
When I dusted out my PC, I opened it up and removed the thick patches of dust. I guess the problematic dust is still there then. I'll find an air can on Monday.
My desktop PC is basically standing on the ground with my bed next to it. It's not a tight fit or anything, and the area under the bed is empty. The air next to the PC isn't hot or anything. I'll make a picture tomorrow, when I have some better lighting to work with. Oh and I don't think I've ever taken a lot of care of my PC hardware... Never knew I had to. |
Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
If there was thick grouping of dust, there's a good chance that your little fans have a bunch of mucous dust that doesn't accomodate air slipping past the blades very well.
The vent that needs to be relatively clear is your out fan vent. Your intake doesn't matter so much, but if the hot air has little room to dissipate away from the case, heating will happen. Ideally, a cracked window or cool air source will greatly lower running temperature. There's a balance during the winter months, if your rig is a power hog and generates a lot of gaming heat, then you can essentially use your pc to grab the cold outside air and level it to room temperature without needing to spend money on higher thermostat use. What kind of psu do you have? If you have extra fan cables(4 pin i think), maybe purchasing a 10 dollar fan would help. Depending on your case, it might require you to make a mount for the fan. On newegg I spent 30$cdn on a coolermaster heatsink(that was massive and wouldn't have fit in anything smaller than my monster case), and it works great. It's got quad copper pipes and a ton of surface area. It is also snap-on upgradable for a second fan on the heatsink which I'm planning to get once I start overclocking and jamming more gpu's in. Pretty cheap alternative. I'm not really sure about your GPU temp, but from what I've read quickly, it wouldn't hurt to keep your gaming temp below 80 C for that card. An extra gpu fan will probably give you a 5-10 degree drop. Don't think your gpu is much of a problem. My gtx 460 is an MSI hawk so i have dual fans inside a shroud. The cooling system is a lot different than a stock 460's, so I can't add a third fan very easily. I'm a little concerned about SLI'ing another hawk since the pci slots are next to each other and the shroud's extension doesn't leave much room for air to flow. Depending on how the new cpu+gpu intel and amd offerings are designed(if they're AM3 compatible) i might upgrade to one of those in order to share the gpu load, then use my current 460 to handle physx + another nvidia SLI'd. |
Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
Did anyone know the program "WhoCrashed"?
It tells me that ntkrnlpa.exe has been causing (most of?) the crashes. So Google doesn't help all that much. The smartest thing I've heard is that perhaps my RAM is defect/corrupt/whatever. I'm going to run MemTest86 to find out. I must say I've also run some tests with some installed HP program, I think a RAM test was included. I also bought a can of air. :) I made the guy smile by asking if they sold air. :p |
Re: Do you think my PC is overheated?
That's weird... I cleaned the dust out of my PC and I haven't had trouble since.
Is it possible that 'ntkrnlpa.exe' has been crashing because of some hardware dust problem? |
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