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its gong to idle clocks, just lowering the cpu multi, until there is something to do, then instantly changing to turbo or base clocks
if its throttling at load, then its either temps or the mobo throttling it
again, not dangerous, just limiting performance
This is not taking into consideration power use of course.
Leaving the PC on for 1+ months, nothing happens.
The only true threat to the PC is dust buildup and brownouts (and of course fan failures).
As for that dust build-up, the Noctua Industrial fan line IP56 and IP67 are gold standard and do not attract dust buildup.
A blanket of dust on any heatsink is the real PC killer along with humidity and very high air temperatures (oh, we should also include salt water humidity as well for those on the coast).
Now it reminds me of opposing air circulation force against fans that can spin them faster or slower which also wears down a fans bearings faster.
For the record, all fans should be blowing in the same direction, spaced apart, not blowing against each other or too close where one fan is spinning the other(s) faster (or slower).
I think I seen setups in mid-tower cases that use negative pressure which should be installed/applied to full tower setups but then again, these people are those types that deshroud a GPU and attach water blocks.
I may hav an issue with my PC. Just installed a new CPU and GPU (did not have dedicated GPU before). and an m.2 drive. The m.2 is running hot (50ºC+ at assembly and 70ºC+ at sensor 1, whatever that is). I think it's mostly due to the design of the MB. The m.2 is pretty much wedged between the CPU and GPU. And while the fans keep heat way from these components, I think the heat that radiates directly to the drive is making it hotter, especially since the GPU is cooled "below" but not a the top.
I think I will install a heatsink on the m.2 and maybe check some extra case airflow. CPU and GPU are not that hot (although it is a hot day today).
Considering that for practical reasons my case as it's rear pointing directly at me, I might switch de flow and go back to front and add some fans at the front to suck the air out.
but they will throttle and slow when too hot
if its under the gpu, you can adjust the gpus fan profile o keep the min at 10-15% to cool the ssd
It's just over the GPU. I will look into adding more fans maybe. Increasing case fan helps a little, but one might not be enough now.