Installer Steam
Logg inn
|
språk
简体中文 (forenklet kinesisk)
繁體中文 (tradisjonell kinesisk)
日本語 (japansk)
한국어 (koreansk)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bulgarsk)
Čeština (tsjekkisk)
Dansk (dansk)
Deutsch (tysk)
English (engelsk)
Español – España (spansk – Spania)
Español – Latinoamérica (spansk – Latin-Amerika)
Ελληνικά (gresk)
Français (fransk)
Italiano (italiensk)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesisk)
Magyar (ungarsk)
Nederlands (nederlandsk)
Polski (polsk)
Português (portugisisk – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (portugisisk – Brasil)
Română (rumensk)
Русский (russisk)
Suomi (finsk)
Svenska (svensk)
Türkçe (tyrkisk)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamesisk)
Українська (ukrainsk)
Rapporter et problem med oversettelse
You don't need to re-apply paste, you'd just be wasting your paste, your temperatures are fine. A little bit toasty, but fine.
The last good standardised cooler Intel had made was during the socket LGA775 days because they had a proper copper core, since then it's just a slim slab of aluminium with a copper plate on the bottom
60C under full load? I highly doubt that. In gaming maybe. Try running the multicore Cinebench test and tell me what you get. It will be higher than 60C under full load.
Definetely would work something out to push that temperatures at least to 60° down during load which seems perfectly possible with the 65 TDP compared to this higher end fireballs in the 11th gen series.
So you're saying it is a pre-build?
If you want to do some combination of bringing the temperature down, changing the looks, and/or lowering the noise, you can consider replacing the stock CPU cooling, but it's not necessary to do for temperature alone if you don't care about the other two things.