i5 6600K temps?

Singularity2

Honorable
Oct 5, 2015
35
0
10,530
Hello,

My CPU is overclocked to 4.4GHz running with 1.248v Vcore. This overclock was done during winter.

My room temp has increased to around 29-31c due to the ongoing heatwave that has hit the UK. There's no AC in my home to correct this issue, so I just have to deal with it.

However, now that my room temp has gone up by a large amount, my CPU has also gone up quite significantly. OCCT now fails within minutes whereas it was previously stable during several 15min tests. Temps hit around 93c during an OCCT large data set test. A quick Cinebench run reported a max temp of 87c. Rendering a 3:41 video using Camtasia 9 saw temps reach a max of 87c as well (running for about a minute)

I know room temp affects CPU temps, but should I be worried? When I originally tested my OC, temps sat around a comfortable 73c-ish during stressing.

My CPU cooler is the Cryorig M9i and my case is the NZXT S340 running with the 2 factory exhaust fans (top and rear) and 2 intake (2x Arctic F12). I currently have the CPU cooler at max speed given the increase in room temp.

During normal use, I don't get worrying temps. It's just when my CPU nears max load I have to worry about hitting past the 80s.

Should I be concerned or are these temps normal considering the cooler I have and my current room temp (29c)?
 
Solution
Well as long as cpu temps stay reasonable during gaming or other normal use then it is likely nothing to worry about. Personally I would take the overclock down maybe 100-200mhz or so, then lower the voltage a bit for the summer months.

Dunlop0078

Titan
Ambassador
Well as long as cpu temps stay reasonable during gaming or other normal use then it is likely nothing to worry about. Personally I would take the overclock down maybe 100-200mhz or so, then lower the voltage a bit for the summer months.
 
Solution

blockhead78

Distinguished


^^ this!

If you want to keep things stable in the weather we're having then (as Dunlop0078 said) it'd best to scale back your OC a little.

Or alternatively, if you really want to keep that OC all year round and stay 100% stable, you could look water cooling (if you want to go down that road that is)