I thought that removing the side panel would improve the overall temps because of the cold room air. After a gaming session they slowly go back from 50 C to around 40. I wouldn't say that ram are not going to cool back down. Opening icue as soon as the system allows that I see temps around 28 C. I know that ram are much cooler at startup. Can you see the version number on your RAM? 3.xx? 4.xx? 5.xx? etc. That does not seem to be the case here You did not mention the IC and I can't tell from the 2133 default timings, but 2x16 is more likely to be Micron or something else not temperature sensitive. While 60C might make me uncomfortable, it still is not likely to matter unless you are running Samsung B-die up on the edge of stability. Max for DDR4 is up in the 70-75C range, depending on who you are talking with. At 50C you are still just fine on RAM temperature. That said, I think the things discussed above are minor details and not something most users need to worry about. While it helps with coolant and liquid cooled component temperatures, the RAM temps go up because there is less air moving across them. I see this all the time when testing with O11 XL and pull off the small side glass. It reduces airflow across the motherboard. This allows the front fans to dump half their air out of the case and the top fans will take the path of least resistance and pull from open air rather than the MB restricted side. The other thing is taking the door off may hurt your RAM temps slightly. This is not really about "how good a fan it is" but rather the actual directional flow from blade hitting or missing the RAM. Fan A with one blade design just happen to blow air directly on/from the RAM in relation to its position. If you want be very tedious in your analysis, exact fan blade design and location in relation to the RAM can affect temperatures by a noticeable margin. it's going to warm up quite a bit, even if you are sitting in idle. You probably can catch it in the 20's when you first cold boot, but it slowly will warm over time and once it does, it is not going to cool back down. The RAM is a constant voltage piece of hardware. However, I don't see your RAM temp as much different than what other Vengeance Pro owners report. Presumably its some combination of heat sink design and LED functionality. The Vengeance Pro modules run warmer than some others, like the RT version or the Dominators. I was just wondering because my previous ddr3 ram were running much cooler at higher voltage and it´s the same case. So you think the ram sticks are ok? I know they can stand much more heat. is a cool card, I never see it running hotter than I have 3 120mm fans on the front blowing in, 1 120mm on the back blowing out, and the 3 aio fans blowing out the roof.Īs you see the vga is idle and quite cool too. as i told you my room is quite chilly, the case is a full tower and the side panel is removed. I always use the rain effect set on dark blue color. I haven´t thought about led lights heating the ram. If you find temperatures close to 45 -50° when gaming, then you know it is an airflow problem and not the ram sticks. Some are bogus (showing temps over 200°) but others should be close to each other and varying with load. You can check case temperature looking at the various motherboard sensors that iCUE displays. they should run fine at that temperature all day. That said, 50☌ isn't ideal but not concerning either. Usually RAM runs just slightly above case temperature, so it's possible if airflow isn't terrific that it's mostly the GPU and CPU that heat them up. They shouldn't run much hotter if you leave them at 3200. Almost 40° at idle at 2133mhz is pretty "high".Īren't you using white lighting on the sticks? the LEDs will heat them up quite a bit depending on what color/brightness you use.
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