question about 3570K temperature

Emir

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Aug 24, 2011
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Hi,
I'm going to buy 3570k and just heard they have a little problem about heat and their temperature get hot, want to know is that in amount which can make problem? doesn't it have any problem in overclocking? (of course won't overclock like professionals)
and what a about noise, has it loud sound?
thanks
 
Solution


with stock speeds there wont be a heating problem. dont be worried. in fact;
3570K (Ivy Bridge) is operating with lesser temps compared to its new series 4670K (Haswell), for overclocking Ivy Bridge is even better, due to having larger dye size, they are easier to be cooled.

The thing is, the more fans you install, the more sound they make. What you gotta do is to check the dB levels of those fans, usually slower running fans are silent, however there are faster and silent fans in the...

n1ghtr4v3n

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Feb 27, 2013
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intel cpu's are fine up to 80C, 100C is the dye limit, under stress test you should be below 80-85C, under gaming and casual usage you should be under 65-70C.

noise is about what kind of cooler you use. stock cooler is pretty loud to be honest, especially under load. they are usually above 25-35dB which is pretty hearable by any person being. But still they are more silent than most GPU fans...

so for overclocking an aftermarket tower heat sink and fan is usually recommended and required for safety.
 

Emir

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Aug 24, 2011
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thanks,
so you think the 3570k cpu itself doesn't have any heat problem, right?
for now I'm not getting cooler and won't overclock, I will also buy Green X3 case which has 4x120mm and 1x200mm mounted fans. so I shouldn't feel much noise, right?
 

n1ghtr4v3n

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Feb 27, 2013
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with stock speeds there wont be a heating problem. dont be worried. in fact;
3570K (Ivy Bridge) is operating with lesser temps compared to its new series 4670K (Haswell), for overclocking Ivy Bridge is even better, due to having larger dye size, they are easier to be cooled.

The thing is, the more fans you install, the more sound they make. What you gotta do is to check the dB levels of those fans, usually slower running fans are silent, however there are faster and silent fans in the market, but ofcourse they are expensive.

The most important thing when choosing a fan is how much air pressure they can create, described with units CFM. a good cooler should have higher CFM preferably above 60CFM.
 
Solution

n1ghtr4v3n

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I believe you'll be fine. Eventhough I'm not really familiar with the brand. It looks ok.