ddrueding
Fixture
Certainly looks bad. Glad I haven't recommended anything but AMD for a couple years.
It's normal to have liquid cooling and recommended for many CPUs, including AMD. I think you have not built a desktop system in over 4 years?Does this affect the i7-13700h in my new laptop? I hope not.
I think a big part of the problem is Intel's ridiculous TDP, at least for their desktop parts. We're on the cusp of liquid cooling being mandatory at the rate we're going. Faster isn't better if you need the output of a nuclear reactor to get there.
Maybe affected. Some reported problems: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...er-blames-common-software-and-hardware-issuesDoes this affect the i7-13700h in my new laptop? I hope not.
I think a big part of the problem is Intel's ridiculous TDP, at least for their desktop parts. We're on the cusp of liquid cooling being mandatory at the rate we're going. Faster isn't better if you need the output of a nuclear reactor to get there.
About 6 years ago, actually. I tend to pick parts with around 65W TDP, both because electricity costs a fortune here, and I hate noisy fans.It's normal to have liquid cooling and recommended for many CPUs, including AMD. I think you have not built a desktop system in over 4 years?
Never had a Noctua fan so I wouldn't know. Anyway, the higher power CPUs tend to be beyond my budget and needs so that's another reason I gravitate towards around 65 TDP. Another reason is you don't have integrated graphics on the high end. I've been done with graphics cards for like a decade, barring some future app where I might absolutely need one (3D design software?).But the max power depends on the workload and duty cycle. At idle there is not much difference between CPUs of the same family. Do you think the Nocturnal fans are too loud? I have mine of the D15 on the temperature profile and they are mostly very quiet until the CPU is on highly loads.
Don't have any preference. I think I usually use whatever fan came with the processor. I'm not even sure what my present CPU is using. I slapped it together over 6 years ago. All I know is outside of when I'm playing with train simulators the system is so quiet I need to put my ear to the case to hear anything.I have a dozen Nocturnal fans. They are ugly but quiet for the airflow and keep on going for years. Which fans do you prefer?
The 3000 and 5000 series did not have integrated video, but the 2022 7950X has better video performance than the 2021 5700G (APU model) though that's not its purpose. The 8000G series has the 780M integrated and is the equivalent APU version of the 7000 series.
Turns out I ordered my first Arctic F12 in November 2011; it's still running in the case I installed it into, despite several systems passing through [EATX tower, started with i5-2500K and a RAID5 PATA board that I might have acquired from a SF member (Handruin? Maxburn?); now contains a Dual Xeon 2699v3 on generic Chinese mainboard I picked up for $100 (mainboard that is; CPUs were like $100 each).I've not used Arctic fans, but noctua does offer black fans now so their signature brown isn't really an issue for me.
I don't know enough about the artic fans to speak about quality differences but I've been using noctua products for a very long time and have never had one fail.
I will give Noctua points for making all sorts of fans in weird form factors, like -- they still make the 60mm quiet fans I bought for my socket 370/A heatsinks -- but that's about it. In almost every other way they're commanding a premium as a status symbol. They're quality, don't get me wrong, but you can get quality for a lot less.
Wow, that is really awful. I did not watch that hippie-looking-dude on the U-Tube, but in no way should a 65W CPU be a degenerate so easily.