Pump stopped working and tempratures went too high before I realise.

Vulmaro

Distinguished
May 12, 2014
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As the title says, after the windows welcome screen, my pc Pc has shut down itself with no bsod or any error, I have restarted again then again the same process but in the 3rd time, I have realised that my mobo NB temprature 90c and cpu 80c, and It operated at those temps around at 5 minutes.

My system:

FX 8350 @4.0 GHZ (COOLER MASTER SEIDON 120V)
CORSAIR 2X4GB 1600MHZ CL9 RAM
SAPPHIRE DUAL-X OC R9 280X
GIGABYTE 970A-UD3P
AOPEN 650W 12V 624W 52A BRONZE PSU
SAMSUNG HD753LJ
WINDOWS 8.1 X64 CORE EDITION.
(Nearly one month has passed since I've bought my system)

My whole system is at stock clocks and voltages. My pump works again and I always connect it with usb because there is not any fan slot left and I don't overclock, It's very enough for me while gaming so my temp is at maximum 40c and there is no noise.

I am very obsessed with numbers so I am in very desperate now (I have never reached 60c cpu temp since one month!!), even though my system runs fine as before, I haven't relieved yet, would these overheat issues shorten my system's life ? May there be a Issue within itself in future ?

I gotta go far away in two days so neither I nor anyone could use my pc to check it.

I am a very obsessed and nervous person who used to take heavy medicine by doctor control so I can't even think right now and English is not my native language so there may be a grammar/spelling mistake in my thread, I am very sory for that, my hands are still shaking.

I will be very happy If anyone responds me as soon as possible I dont want to get sleeping issues again
 
Solution


You're fine. 80 degrees may seem hot to us, but it's a warm breeze to microelectronics.

It takes an awful lot of heat to damage modern integrated circuits. Part of the fabrication process involves baking the wafer at temperatures over 1,000 degrees centigrade in order to activate the implanted ions. 80 degrees is nothing compared to this. Granted, this step occurs before the metal interconnects and the IC is soldered to the package, but even the fiberglass and epoxy circuit board can take several hundred degrees at a minimum.

What kills integrated circuits is a combination of heat + current + time = electromigration. You would need to run it chronically at over 90 degrees for months on end, if not years, to notice any significant degradation.

You're fine, relax.
 
Solution