Safe temperatures for CPU/GPU
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Yeah, I'd be double checking that the CPU cooler is mounted correctly.
Was the cooler the stock cooler that came part n parcel or sloppy seconds from the previous CPU? -
@creayt said:
On a thin workstation laptop now and though it doesn't feel hot to my hands the monitor says the CPU is oscillating between 75 and 95 celsius. Is that normal or is my laptop's lifespan flying out the window?
90C is too hot.. even 80c is quite high. The Asus one I had with the gtx 980 run about 70c under load. That's why I got a thick one much better cooling for all those components the normal size ones are notorious for thermal issues.
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@nadnerB said:
Yeah, I'd be double checking that the CPU cooler is mounted correctly.
Was the cooler the stock cooler that came part n parcel or sloppy seconds from the previous CPU?It's an MSI Stealth Pro ( 17" gaming laptop ) that arrived from BestBuy yesterday.
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@creayt said:
@nadnerB said:
Yeah, I'd be double checking that the CPU cooler is mounted correctly.
Was the cooler the stock cooler that came part n parcel or sloppy seconds from the previous CPU?It's an MSI Stealth Pro ( 17" gaming laptop ) that arrived from BestBuy yesterday.
Buying from best buy is a mistake, many of the models if it the same models as sold else where are customized too make cheaper for best buy. Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo and many others are doing this for them.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@creayt said:
@nadnerB said:
Yeah, I'd be double checking that the CPU cooler is mounted correctly.
Was the cooler the stock cooler that came part n parcel or sloppy seconds from the previous CPU?It's an MSI Stealth Pro ( 17" gaming laptop ) that arrived from BestBuy yesterday.
Buying from best buy is a mistake, many of the models if it the same models as sold else where are customized too make cheaper for best buy. Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo and many others are doing this for them.
That would depend on whether you know what you're doing or not, wouldn't it. The reason to buy an identical model from Best Buy is for compounding discounts. I got the newest, identical MSI Stealth Pro ( the only model w/ the 5th gen i7 ) and was able to use:
A 10% off coupon
A 5% off promotional rebate
Elite status certificates to reduce the cost
And got about $40 in new certificates directly from this purchase.All in all it was hundreds of dollars less than any other buying option, had free expedited shipping, and NO RESTOCKING FEE if I decide to return it ( compared to big ones from NewEgg and other resellers ), a mistake would've been not to order this laptop through Best Buy.
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@creayt said:
The reason to buy an identical model from Best Buy
Unfortunetly just because the model numbers and specs are the same does not mean they are identical when buying from best buy. They are known for ripping people off both in sales & service.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@creayt said:
The reason to buy an identical model from Best Buy
Unfortunetly just because the model numbers and specs are the same does not mean they are identical when buying from best buy. They are known for ripping people off both in sales & service.
It does if you check all of the specs and they're exactly the same.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@creayt said:
The reason to buy an identical model from Best Buy
Unfortunetly just because the model numbers and specs are the same does not mean they are identical when buying from best buy. They are known for ripping people off both in sales & service.
That said, I mostly agree with you. Best Buy is a real shit show and it's a wonder they're still in business. Their web site errors every 4th click.
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@creayt said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@creayt said:
The reason to buy an identical model from Best Buy
Unfortunetly just because the model numbers and specs are the same does not mean they are identical when buying from best buy. They are known for ripping people off both in sales & service.
It does if you check all of the specs and they're exactly the same.
Not really. Specs isn't what make their models different. It's the things like capacitors and power regulators that are different. You won't see them on a spec sheet.
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Can you contact MSI and get the intended thermal specs from them?
Might be time for an RMA. -
@nadnerB said:
Can you contact MSI and get the intended thermal specs from them?
Might be time for an RMA.Good tip. Unfortunately there were a handful of other dealbreakers that have inspired me to return the laptop and look for a new model. A pretty terrible screen, a completely missing left windows key ( I use this all day every day ), the worst trackpad I've ever touched, and poor jack and keyboard placement are all simultaneously dealbreaking what could've been an amazing workstation.
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@thecreativeone91
If that's true, how does that stuff affect anything about the experience? It honestly sounds kind of conspiracy theory to me ( an admitted layman ).
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@creayt said:
@thecreativeone91
If that's true, how does that stuff affect anything about the experience? It honestly sounds kind of conspiracy theory to me ( an admitted layman ).
Reliability is the biggest thing. This same stuff affects why commercial gear outlasts and outperforms consumer gear. Higher quality parts and build, not better specs.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@creayt said:
@thecreativeone91
If that's true, how does that stuff affect anything about the experience? It honestly sounds kind of conspiracy theory to me ( an admitted layman ).
Reliability is the biggest thing. This same stuff affects why commercial gear outlasts and outperforms consumer gear. Higher quality parts and build, not better specs.
Ah ok, well if that's true it probably doesn't affect most people, wouldn't affect me at least. The only laptop I've ever kept for more than a year or two is one I kept to give to my mom. I don't know how long most people hold onto computers, but they feel pretty obsolete after 2 years and my impression is that people don't expect them to last much more than that.
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@creayt said:
Ah ok, well if that's true it probably doesn't affect most people, wouldn't affect me at least. The only laptop I've ever kept for more than a year or two is one I kept to give to my mom. I don't know how long most people hold onto computers, but they feel pretty obsolete after 2 years and my impression is that people don't expect them to last much more than that.
I think most people are heading towards 10 years these days. I still have my "new" laptop and it was purchased in early 2012. That's 3.5 years now. Still snappy and newer than almost anyone that I know that buys as a normal consumer.
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@scottalanmiller said:
I think most people are heading towards 10 years these days. I still have my "new" laptop and it was purchased in early 2012. That's 3.5 years now. Still snappy and newer than almost anyone that I know that buys as a normal consumer.
That blows my mind. I have a 5 year old ( 2010 ) iMac and it's too slow for me to put up with for even web browsing. I can't imagine how tedious and painful it'd be to use a 10 year old system.
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@creayt said:
That blows my mind. I have a 5 year old ( 2010 ) iMac and it's too slow for me to put up with for even web browsing. I can't imagine how tedious and painful it'd be to use a 10 year old system.
If you had something other than an iMac you'd probably find web browsing to be just fine. My desktop is seven years old and the web experience is the same as my brand new MacBook Pro i7 with 16GB.
If you think about all the people still running Windows XP, those people all have machines that are not too far off from ten years. XP is 14 years old now. Windows Vista will be a decade old soon. A decent machine from the Vista era is really not bad at all for basic tasks. When you look at what normal people use a computer for there are generally two camps: gamers who need the latest stuff and normal users for whom a well treated decade old machine isn't all that old.
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Agreed - for typical day to day tasks a 7-10 year old machine really does do OK as long as you don't have to much OS rot. Often an OS reinstall (especially of XP - but why are you still running that) will resolve those kinds of problems. Of course an SSD and 4+ GB of RAM will greatly improve any experience on those older machines too.
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@Dashrender said:
Agreed - for typical day to day tasks a 7-10 year old machine really does do OK as long as you don't have to much OS rot. Often an OS reinstall (especially of XP - but why are you still running that) will resolve those kinds of problems. Of course an SSD and 4+ GB of RAM will greatly improve any experience on those older machines too.
Yes, normal maintenance applies. Regular OS reinstalls and updates, moving to SSD and enough RAM goes a LONG way.
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Interestingly enough, there's a quote from Anandtech from an article yesterday saying that PC update cycles average about 3-4 years. Thought that was interesting.