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Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
Ryzen 9 7900 under load with World Community Grid cancer simulations, it only gets up to the 50s C.
It's all about Ambient Room temp, if your room stays cool so will your CPU
yeah not really a factor.....if you go past the 7 series from ether maker you need to be on a 360mm AIO or bigger....with the power limits of most i9's you should be on a 420mm if you want boost clocks for all cores and not single core highest boost....
One of my PC has a big Noctua air cooler and my other PC has a big 420mm AIO.
Air Cooler is less likely to fail but makes upgrades of CPU and GPU (yes, ironically) more difficult. AIO is usually a tiny bit better at cooling CPU but also making the airflow better for GPU, RAM, VRM.
So I have a small preference for AIO for my main rig but air cooling for builds I don’t plan to upgrade.
Well you see i don't believe in super fast, boiling hot CPU's or GPU's.
When picking something for myself i look at things like TDP and check an air coolers ability to cool it.
So yes i like air coolers but I'm not going for an i9 at 99Ghz.
I am cooling a Ryzen 9 with a single tower air cooler lol. Granted, I don't intend to overclock, so it has been sufficient so far.
First, air can be quieter. I'm using Noctua fans on a Thermaltake Peerless Assassin, and with larger fans and the right fan curve, I barely hear it unless it really gets going. An AIO has fans, but also has a pump making noise. It's a negligible amount of noise, but it's still more noise than a decent air cooler.
Second, air has fewer points of failure, making it more reliable. It's literally just the fans. If a fan goes out, replace it. An AIO has fans, the pump, and if it springs a ♥♥♥♥ you now have literal liquid leaking into your computer, which is never a problem I have to worry about, ever. I know the chances of an AIO springing a ♥♥♥♥ are low, but a chance is still a chance.
Third, I really don't care what my PC looks like inside. I have a Fractal North XL in black and walnut with the mesh side panel. No RGB anywhere. I can't see in there anyway, and the biggest reason to use an AIO besides the moderately better cooling performance vs a decent air cooler (and I'm not overclocking anyway so meh) is that it looks cool. The inside of my PC is a nightmare of black components and brown/beige Noctua fans. It's there to work, not to impress anyone.
This is just on the cpu though. I don't do any custom cooling for my gpu since it cannot be overclocked any more than it is, and its already built to run like it.
AIOs keep the CPU slightly cooler, but not by much. Then when they go out, you have to replace the entire unit, which can cost hundreds of dollars. When a fan locks up on an air cooler, you can just keep the same heat sink and replace the fan alone, which usually only costs like $10 to $20 at most.
in my opinion totally worth it.