Generally it's fine.can u put ur pc on the floor under ur desk to help with noise ,or shud i keep it on my desk
Yeah, that's perfect then, no issues at all.lol yea its a wooded floor so it shud be all good ill give it a try to see if it helps
Any temp under 83 is a bonus, it's just if the noise level suits you.got my temps to stay around 70 to 79 buy changeing the fan speed and fan curve ,is that good ?? or shud i get it to be at 80 most of the time ?
The noise levels is related to the fan speed, and the fan speed is a direct result of high temperatures - putting it on the floor won't make much difference.can u put ur pc on the floor under ur desk to help with noise ,or shud i keep it on my desk
It wasn't an assumption...
Having a smaller case than the OP but having way better temperatures.Fair enough, how did you come to the conclusion then?
Having a smaller case than the OP but having way better temperatures.
Ok, not sure how that's not assumption, but will leave it there
Please don't refer to the way PCS set up their systems as a terrible layout though. This is in your opinion based on your own singular use case Opinions are great and debate is wonderful, but selling an opinion as a fact can become dangerous when inexperienced people take the advice as gospel.
Having a smaller case than the OP but having way better temperatures.
It's mostly common sense.
It just depends on whether you care about your GPU or CPU more. For me, I intentionally bought a cheaper CPU because I don't care if it's hotter - I can't even get it above 60C even when I try, and my GPU doesn't go above 60C either because of my case.
Now if I replaced my motherboard and CPU to say a 12900K my GPU temperatures wouldn't be affected, but my CPU would be hot, which it will do anyway because Intel likes to do that. It doesn't matter, the top AIO would still get cool air from the front and by your very own logic the passing air through my GPU wouldn't be as hot as my actual GPU.
There's also other things you must consider, my motherboard, RAM and all other components are getting cooler air. Where as yours are all getting hotter air. Some of the YouTube videos I have seen suffer from negative air pressure, they've put 240mm front AIO into massive cases, with three fans as top exhaust. It isn't a fair and accurate comparison to what OP has, and what I have, and probably not the same as what you have either.
It is irrelevant who built the PC, I couldn't care less if it was PC Specialist, PC World, Amazon - I am merely trying to help the OP in learning a thing or two about air flow and how it works.
You made so many assumptions and presumptions in your post regarding airflow, and how "warmer" air doesn't affect a GPU when there's facts to suggest otherwise. It's not opinion or assumption when it's factual evidence. If you try playing games on your PC in the summer when the temperature is 30C you will find that your GPU is not just 10C hotter then when the ambient temperature is say 20C.
You can't honestly tell me when 20C air is flowing onto your AIO that the temperature of that air is lower than 30C, it's like 40-50C. That 40-50C temperature is like your GPU running on max load in the Sahara Desert. Sure I'm plucking these numbers out of thin air right now, but all you have to do is put your hand above your PC case and you'll know what the temperature of the air is.
Anyway, I don't think it's sensible or smart to suffocate a GPU worth £2000 in order to preserve a CPU chip worth 1/5th of that in value or less - that's ultimately my point. There's no need to get upset about my "opinions", whether factual or not. The cost of his GPU is expensive, and it should be given priority over anything else.
You've edited to include a video from a reference that I wouldn't put much weight on.
Again, we're not going to get anywhere here. Searching youtube to support your argument and then telling me that it's common sense is disrespectful IMO.
I'm not using common sense based on an opinion of one use case and a video from an unknown source. I'm using engineering background, actual testing experience and testing from well established sources.
I'm genuinely impressed you managed to find a video supporting your thoughts in honesty. Most other outlets concluded that it didn't make enough of a difference to temps to adopt one way or the other. The only consideration was the dust management. Even with that being said though, I would be happier with an 86°C GPU rather than a 96°C CPU at full chat.
Ok, I'm just going to stop you right here. This is a soft warning. You need to consider the tone of your responses here as I'm in no way being disrespectful or dismissive of anything you are saying. I'm merely pointing out that it's your opinion, based on your setup and your components. If you have tried both ways and found a difference, that's fine. I did the same and found none.... this is also fine.
I've not made any assumptions or presumptions. I spent a lot of time testing and researching before offering any advice, but my research comes from much more valid sources.... in my opinion.
I'm not going to continue this debate any longer, I'll allow the OP and future OPs to make their decisions based on the advice given. I'm not here to argue with you as their comes a point in a discussion when it's clearly going to be pointless.
the fans only come on when their underload ,its just coil wine when the gpu is underload ,, i put the pc under my desk so i cant here it anymore thank god
I still think you should put that AIO at the top and get a few front fans for your GPU.