Gpu temp monitor nvidia1/29/2024 Oh and if your case has filters infront of the fans try removing them, they can restrict airflow. But this is a rather expensive option if you already own the card lol.Īs a last ditch effort you could pull the side panel off the case and aim a regular fan at it and see what happens. My founders edition 2070 did pretty well for as small as it was. I rarely get the stock nvidia cards for this reason. In an extreme case maybe look for a different aftermarket card that has better cooling. If that doesn’t work move on to undervolting and under clocking the card. As well as seeing if your Bios has controls for the case fans. Then I would use software like afterburner or EVGA’s to set a more aggressive fan curve or control it manually. If you have to put it on the floor at least put a board or something under it. The first thing I would start with is make sure your case has “adequate” airflow and that it has good ventilation with intake air somewhere near the bottom and exhaust somewhere near or out the top. Case airflow is a tricky thing, more isn’t always better. Even really high rpm fans that made a crazy amount of noise lol. I have also in many cases have had adding fans do nothing as well. Many times I have seen it not really make a difference but never made it worse. I personally have never had removing the side panel from a case make my temps worse. I’m just waiting for official RTX 3080 or 3090 cards prices to release, so I can fall out of my chair from from shock. I’ve liquid cooled all my processors since 1996, but have never liquid cooled my graphics card, but my next card will definitely be liquid cooled for both the GPU and VRAM. The weird thing is, I noticed when I quit flying, and enter the Main Menu, the temps go up, which makes no sense at all. I opened the AORUS app, changed it from Auto to Manual, and set the fan between 85% - 90% of the cards full fan speed. With most FPS games I choose a target temperature (68 C / 154 F) that I want maintained (my preferred Max temp) and my cards fans never have to work that hard to hold that temperature, until MSFS came along.Īt first I didn’t even have Afterburner’s monitoring displayed, when I turned it on to start tweaking the Sim’s settings, I almost freaked when I saw the 176 F temp. But I rely on Gigabyte’s AORUS app to run my cards fans. ![]() I have a Gigabyte AORUS RTX 2080 running MSFS 2560 x 1440, I use Afterburner to display GPU temps and FPS for tweaking the games. One thread already makes a good start on this issue with some particular posts but it’s filled with a number of other posts not specifically focusing on temperature or having more diffuse comments on computer-specific parameters. So I thought a thread might be helpful specifically addressing analyzing and correcting GPU temperature and possibly software related issues that cause a GPU not to perform with optimum efficiency and temperature control. In several different threads on this forum, GPU temperature has been suggested as a possible cause of crashes and performance problems. ![]() Currently thru GeForce Experience I have my NVIDIA Driver set to be the latest GeForce Game Ready driver (452.06, ) but am unsure whether having any version of CUDA around affects gaming. Is having CUDA associated with my GPU and an older version at that going to affect my GPU performance (and its temperature?). pcgamer – 6 Jun 19Ī somewhat related question to GPU performance and temperature is that for machine learning purposes, I’ve installed CUDA drivers and since I was working with MS’s machine learning framework, CNTK 2.7, I only installed an earlier version, CUDA 9.x as required by CNTK, not 10.x or whatever it’s up to now. I’ve read that taking the sides off a computer case may hurt rather than help. In Jared Walton’s PC Gamer article, he suggests using MSI Afterburner and playing around with GPU voltages and clock speed. Reading the Dell forums some users diss the ventilation design of the 8930 case and recommend installing an extra fan to control overall internal heat. He says that although both NVIDIA and AMD claim that their cards are made to take temperatures in the 80 deg C range (even up to 92 deg C on some cards) that the experience of Bitcoin miners(!) running PC’s 24x7 with GPU’s cranked up all the way into that temperature range shows that a GPU isn’t going to last long into the future. I’ve read PC Gamer’s article on How to Lower Your Graphics Card Temperature () by Jared Walton. My NVIDIA RTX 2070 Super (8 Gb VRAM) can easily go over 80 deg C (176 deg F) and as high as 84 deg C when running FS 2020 in a house 26.7 deg C (80 deg F) or so.
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