

Under intensive load and processing, however, they end up faring between 60C and 85C. This temperature range matches the room temperature or surrounding environment for the most part. GPUs tend to have an idle temperature between 30C and 40C when not in demanding use. Setting a fan curve for your GPU in a PC that has limited airflow can help improve temperatures significantly. If you’ve overclocked your GPU or if for any reason you’ve diagnosed that your GPU is responsible for heating up your device (this is a likely scenario for those processing intensive graphics), optimizing its fan curve to allow for efficient and effective cooling will keep your GPU from damaging itself and will allow it to work as intensively as needed to deliver the performance you’re expecting from it. GPUs, in particular, when overclocked or optimized to extreme profiles are bound to overheat and cause the rest of your system to heat up as well they form hot air pockets that insulate within the computer structure and cause the general system temperature to rise. It's better now then when i put the card in at first.With any sort of overclocking or intensive usage of your processor, RAM, CPU, or GPU, you’ll end up causing your components to overheat as they work to deliver the optimal performance you’re looking for. I'd really just like to avoid having a card that sounds like a jet engine in my case which is probably the louddest thing i heard as my case fans are quiet edition from corsair and my PSU is barely audible as it is facing downwards.Īlso looking to avoid thermal throttling as that is probably was causing the GPU to sound pretty loud. So i guess i'll try out aggresive fan curve and see what happens. I've tried it on custom last night and the RPMs were around 1100rpm and it went up to about 1862rpm under load and that's having the fan set to auto. You don't have to save the settings right away you know. It's like you keep trying to guess what it's about right now. I think it's best if you open up the fan profile page and see for yourself what's inside first. I also heard that it's best to leave the fan on auto. So your basically saying if I have the fan still on Auto and just set a custom profile or use the aggresive/quiet fan curve than it won't cool the card comparing to if i have it set on manual for when i'm gaming, doesn't that kinda create more of a hassle having to turn auto on and off. Originally posted by Satanic | BlackReaper:
