Posts by SWAT_OP-R8R
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Short answer
Yes
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futuristic-christmas-celebration-concept (1).jpg
May your holidays be filled with the warmth of a thousand suns, the wonder of a nebula's glow, and the joy of a perfectly executed hyperspace jump.
Merry Christmas.
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use the vanilla shader option until I have a chance to look into it
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Quote
We are the Borg. Resistance is futile.
When looking at this big water block my inner voice keeps asking "can it make coffee?".
I toned down the possible RGB puke on my build to a satisfying minimum. It does not have to light up my entire room. RGB is nice until it starts to bother you.
That however, does not mean you can do some fancy stuff.
(not the greatest video quality filming in the dark)
The fans are also mirror rgb stuff but thats only active in certain situations.
Barely visible, but the red display shows 41°C idle temp after ~1 hour. That is actually ok for a 9800x3d (idle temps are a mess on AMD). But since I got a pretty good sample I undervolted it massively (and stable) so during +1hour stress test temps never went higher than 69°C.
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Ultrawide monitors are nice for gaming (if the games support them) but the troubles on all games with 16:9 stuff.
The temps are no surprise after that short duration.
You probably have to stress test for an hour before the water of your loop gets saturated. The graphic card specifically will contribute to the total heat of your loop since the 20xx series runs very inefficently.
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Well you don't use such endless mirror fans if not for aesthics
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No, the fan origentation is correct the way it is.
But you have 5 fans on the radiators which blow the air out of the case but only 4 fans (which look like reverse fans) which suck fresh air in. Means you very likely will have a lower air pressure inside the case than outside. This in result means that air flows into the case from other sources (e.g. the pcie slots or other tiny openings). Those openings are impossible to cover with dust filters therefore the negative air pressure will suck in all the dust.
If you have more intake fans (with dust filters) than exhaust fans you create a positive air pressure inside the case which prevents that any dust can get in through other openings (other than the with dust filter covered intake fans).
You can increase the speed of the 4 intake fans to outbalance the 5 exhaust fans. All you have to do is to adjust the fan curves. I assume that ROG fan controller at the back has some software for that.