This is Why Ryzen 5 3600s Are FAILING!

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • Why are Ryzen 5 3600's and possibly other 4 core and 6 core CPUs starting to fail a lot more in 2023? Well today I check out memory lane and notice one huge difference.
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    Chapters
    00:00 The problem I personally came into with a recently purchased Ryzen 5 3600.
    01:56 GAMING temps are HIGH! over 90 degrees with a wraith stealth...!?
    02;55 Changing over to a wraith prism cooler, kind of... alleviates the problem, but doesn't fully.
    03:50 Looking back at 2019 Tech Yes City Data, I think this is the REASON Ryzen 5 3600s are failing...!
    05:57 How can we fix this? let's try change some settings (worst case scenario), checking out PBO, limits and more.
    09:40 Problem FIXED! however we need to fine tune this some more, with an undervolt.
    11:14 Conclusion, undervolt and temp limits are your best friend on cheap AM4 motherboards. Before and After.
    13:08 Recommendations, Monitor your temps! My Magic number is 70 degrees for gaming.
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Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @techyescity
    @techyescity  Před rokem +156

    Little bit of confusion in the comments of this video so hopefully I can clear it up here. volt-amps and cooling is what you give a CPU, heat is what you get. No harm can come out of checking your temperatures while you are gaming, and making sure they are, say below 70c. Heat also causes combustion, which is why it's so important to keep it at low as possible in the everyday PC. Ultimately though, on the a320 (without changing our cooling solution), we can reduce these temps by undervolting, and setting in a max temp limit (which also reduces the clock speeds to levels that consume less voltages too).
    So I was working more in reverse order in this video. However the video is designed to help people without much knowledge on the subject too.
    As for the aggressive voltages, AMD should release a bios update, with the option to select a more conservatively tuned CPU, as we could only really undervolt -.075mv before we reached instability on this setup.

    • @supersolidsnake7772
      @supersolidsnake7772 Před rokem +4

      @@charlesg5085 Thats very overkill for the 3600, the stock cooler will do just fine.

    • @ChosenOneDan
      @ChosenOneDan Před rokem

      love the top gear retrowave track in the video big fan of that game series. crazy how good the utilization is on ryzen now its awesome

    • @September-wx9tr
      @September-wx9tr Před rokem

      What I used to do is lower the cpu clock speed from 4.2 to 3.6 ghz in ryzen Master with just a couple of clicks and I would drop 20c right of the bat, but now that I have a 6700xt I feel like I’m giving up a significant amount of performance by doing that

    • @deagt3388
      @deagt3388 Před rokem +3

      Factory coolers have always been rubbish!;-)

    • @ChosenOneDan
      @ChosenOneDan Před rokem +2

      @DEA GT idk man the wraith prisms pretty solid for what it is. A bit noisy but it keeps my friends 3900x cool stock. That's pretty awesome to cool a 12 core chip

  • @sjsd1990
    @sjsd1990 Před rokem +619

    Investing a good cooler could extend your CPU lifespan and it can probably sit in your next rig then.

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před rokem +41

      Looks an awful lot like AMD got greedy and harvest more bad modes and clocked them high enough to just fit into a 3600 chip. I.E theses cores really belong in a lower end CPU.

    • @f0x4nn3
      @f0x4nn3 Před rokem +39

      TjMAX of server parts is lower with a reason. Also i have a thinkpad, it doesn;t allow the CPU to go higher then 72c. Most consumer stuff just pushes parts too hard cause they are expecting a lower duty cycle... and if it dies outside warranty it's not their issue anyways.

    • @Miguelissimmo
      @Miguelissimmo Před rokem +33

      Exactly .. my Noctua NH-U9B cooled my Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550 (socket 775) for 13 years .. now it is cooling my brand new AMD Ryzen 5 5500, thanks to the 8$ AM4/AM5 socket adaptor I bought from Noctua .. this cooler was a great, great investment I'm telling you ..

    • @bdhale34
      @bdhale34 Před rokem +6

      @@brokeandtired it's mainboard makers defaulting the core voltage .05 - .15v too high for the chips. More voltage makes higher temps and the voltage is what's killing the chip, it will slow down when it's too hot it won't do anything if it's being shocked to death.

    • @Ghastly10
      @Ghastly10 Před rokem +7

      Very true, about 5 years ago I had a I7 8700K based system built. It came with a huge Gigabyte tower cooler. The system is still motoring along nicely, the only recent changes I had done to it, was to have a RTX 3060 replace my trusty 1070ti and a extra 1TB SSD put in. The hottest my CPU has ever gets is around the 70 degrees C mark, and that is when doing a heavy work load.

  • @vyathaen
    @vyathaen Před rokem +436

    ryzen 7000 series with their 95c temperature 24/7 enters the chat.

    • @vincentvega3093
      @vincentvega3093 Před rokem +38

      This is fine.

    • @cppctek
      @cppctek Před rokem +63

      Amd says it’s normal but I call bs lol 😂 they won’t last

    • @bgtubber
      @bgtubber Před rokem +133

      ​@@cppctek What about Intel's 13th gen 100*C out of the box? 🤔

    • @AshtonCoolman
      @AshtonCoolman Před rokem +37

      My 9900k required a helluva lot of cooling to keep it from hitting 95 to 100c. I have a 5600x and 7700x as well now that I built last year. My 7700x doesn't go over 80 with my 280mm AIO in my Corsair 4000D Airflow.

    • @N0N0111
      @N0N0111 Před rokem +23

      Those AMD reps are lying their underwear's off.

  • @PokèMyBalls
    @PokèMyBalls Před rokem +176

    I think the only thing you forgot to mention was that if they use a Prism there is an option switch on the bottom side to change the fan speed to High.

    • @techyescity
      @techyescity  Před rokem +40

      Forgot about that, thanks!

    • @StriderVM
      @StriderVM Před rokem

      @@NotANOVERPRICEDGOUGINGTECHFAN But your AIOs might be running quieter. You might need to adjust the fan speeds on your AIO / motherboard settings to increase air flow?

    • @PokèMyBalls
      @PokèMyBalls Před rokem

      @Gamer's Always Get Expensive Scrap Wafers! The Wraith Prism is a down firing cooler. So it might just be blowing air onto one of the temp sensor zones.

    • @techyescity
      @techyescity  Před rokem +1

      @Brian Babin Which motherboard was this with?

    • @jirehla-ab1671
      @jirehla-ab1671 Před 8 měsíci

      @@techyescity my system integrator stress test my cpu and never reached 100C, but when I run it, it does reach it

  • @dabomba49
    @dabomba49 Před rokem +43

    Interesting to see more being looked into this. Greg has had quite a few defective 3600s come through on fix or flop so it’s interesting to see it be more widespread than just there.

    • @JoaoPinto-1983
      @JoaoPinto-1983 Před rokem

      Not only 3600 in his videos

    • @jamiemarsden
      @jamiemarsden Před rokem +3

      DEFECTIVE* roughly translated to 'some goofy twat killed his cpu coz he thought OC was a perk XD

  • @3Runner95
    @3Runner95 Před rokem +363

    My best advice for longevity is to just cap your fps, it doesn't even have to be an aggressive cap just at the higher end of your avg, or at refresh for non competitive titles. It will feel the same in game but your components will stop running at 100%, and temperatures can drop quite drastically. Giving it that little bit of breathing room really helps.

    • @jessiejames1681
      @jessiejames1681 Před rokem +36

      I dunno man. I've seen that video where Der8auer overclocked for 4125 hours (6 months) straight & there was almost no degradation.

    • @yan3066
      @yan3066 Před rokem

      👍

    • @flashjsr
      @flashjsr Před rokem +11

      still run in a 1060 6gb. still struggles to get 60 fps. Sadge

    • @Stikkzz
      @Stikkzz Před rokem +19

      the stock cooler on the 3600 is just garbage. the stock one from the 1600 was way better

    • @unnamed715
      @unnamed715 Před rokem +21

      I always enable Vsync. My system sounds like a jet taking off until I enable Vsync then it sounds like an RC jet taking off 😂

  • @Analyzer82
    @Analyzer82 Před rokem +212

    First thing I noticed when I made my 3600 setup was high CPU temps! Even at idle. Doing some research I found that Mobos by default set core voltages very high. Mine was 1.4v at the time. You need to manually set the max core voltage ( or offset) and find the sweet spot. Mine is set at 1.25 volts (over clocked) and it give max performance while keeping cool.

    • @bdhale34
      @bdhale34 Před rokem +40

      Truth, most boards seem to have the vcore about .15v over what the chip actually needs to run, that excess voltage is producing excess heat and lots of it. Heat isn't the problem the chip will protect itself if it's too hot, it won't protect itself if it's being electrocuted to death slowly by over voltage though.

    • @VMC_Boy
      @VMC_Boy Před rokem +7

      Interesting. Mine idles just in the bios at 45-50 degrees and it always annoyed me. Will need to try this when I get a chance.

    • @depralexcrimson
      @depralexcrimson Před rokem +12

      This!
      My game mode on the mobo auto set it to 1.45v.
      It got ruined a year in, and i kept bsoding every game

    • @unnamed715
      @unnamed715 Před rokem +25

      I swear these mobo manufacturers out here deliberately trying to fry our CPUs so we have to go out and buy new ones! 😅

    • @elih9700
      @elih9700 Před rokem +5

      I dropped my v-core 1.21 and set clocks to 4.2 on my 3800x. At default the cpu fan ramped up whenever opening a browser neverming gaming, annoyed the hell out of me.

  • @natholidis
    @natholidis Před rokem +13

    This one is pretty interesting to me. I have a 3600 that has never worked at stock settings. It was a very hard issue to diagnose, because I have tried so many things, and it tended to present as more of a GPU or memory issue, but after thorough testing, I found it did not work at default settings. I eventually had it stable for over a year at 4ghz all core locked, but eventually it started getting worse and getting less stable. This was across 4 motherboards, 4 GPUs, and 3 ram kits. This was a launch 3600 I got as a gift, so it took me a long time to determine it was a CPU fault, as there were a bunch of bios issues at launch.

    • @airmicrobe
      @airmicrobe Před rokem

      I always use stock speed at default settings and I maybe get this CPU in February with a320 hdv r4.0. I probably expect no issue.

  • @junkerzn7312
    @junkerzn7312 Před rokem +25

    Going into AMD CBS and changing the TDP/PPT/EDC/etc settings is the best solution (other BIOS settings might also be needed to prevent the BIOS from ignoring the PPT). That is typically better than messing with voltages or frequencies because single-core / fewer-cores operation won't be impeded as much. Just lower the package power limit to something reasonable. I do this on all my machines, even the high-end ones, because otherwise they use double the power just to squeeze out another 10% in performance or so, which gets into silly-land pretty quickly.
    The thermal temperature limit in the BIOS is not as good a setting because it is a far more indirect and slow servo. PPT is a very fast servo.

    • @Keullo-eFIN
      @Keullo-eFIN Před 7 měsíci

      With my current 5800X, capping the power just gave more performance.

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Před 5 měsíci

      It'll try and check this out, any more tips or steps on how our do it?

  • @mackenziebullied4900
    @mackenziebullied4900 Před rokem +151

    I heard on gamers nexus that some am4 boards use too high a voltage to make their board look faster than the competition, i think that might be at play here as well for some people?? It was a pretty big deal

    • @fewik8567
      @fewik8567 Před rokem +19

      Yeah, keeps the CPU happy and boosted up, it's acting like an involuntary overclock.

    • @nhozdien5058
      @nhozdien5058 Před rokem +11

      Well, I did watch Buildzoid’s video about chip degradation, only high and low temperature cycle will affect gpu (solder balls crack), and cpu are highly affected by electro migration due to high voltage or the silicon quality itself. Notice that, overclocking a cpu with liquid nitrogen can often kill your cpu too. Therefore, I have to disagree with Tech Yes City if he says high temperature is the cpu killer.

    • @bdhale34
      @bdhale34 Před rokem +14

      @@nhozdien5058 The solder ball issue is only really a big problem when the underfill is wrong for the temperature variations it will see, 100% it's the voltage killing the chips temperature is protected against the chip will slow itself down for heat, it will allow itself to die via over voltage every single time though. The high voltage is what's causing at least some of the high temps as well.

    • @xthelord1668
      @xthelord1668 Před rokem +5

      @@nhozdien5058 tech yes city is actually right because this has been a thing for very long time: voltage x amps is what kills the CPU but temperature is a factor of how quickly that CPU will die
      internal resistance of transistors rises with temperature which brings up the amps,voltage and with that wattage in order for CPU to not have stability issues
      this was always the thing you had to do with ryzen CPUs because they ran hot as hell with stock coolers and asked for both decent undervolts and cooling solutions

    • @nhozdien5058
      @nhozdien5058 Před rokem +1

      @@xthelord1668 The resistance of copper does increase as temperature goes higher. However, silicon decreases its electrical resistance as temperature increases.
      In the beginning of the video, Brian kinda gave me that vibe of saying high temperature was the CPU killer. This was the reason why I said I would disagree if it was his implication in the beginning.
      As the video went, I saw his conclusion and couldn't disagree.

  • @sludgefactory241
    @sludgefactory241 Před rokem +72

    Stuff like this is why I like your channel. Getting the most out of older hardware, and the breakdown of the BIOS settings really gives knowledge to someone like me that is still somewhat new to this wonderful hobby. Can't tell you how intimidating some of the Asus bios settings are to me. I'm a Weiner and afraid to mess with a majority of them. But I have a little more confidence moving forward now thanks to videos like these. Thanks again!

    • @chupacabra0_098
      @chupacabra0_098 Před rokem +5

      If you're intimidated by Asus you havent seen the barebones Gigabyte ones 🤣

  • @KooYu
    @KooYu Před rokem +44

    Back in 2020, I immediately noticed my 3600's temps were very high for my taste, even with a good air cooler (arctic 34 duo), like spiking instantly to low 70s and reaching high 70s during a sustained high load. But it turned out those were pretty much normal out of the box thermals.
    The solution was simply undervolting, no temp limit needed. I use CTR for fine tuning and OC but anyone can do it easily from the bios as you pointed out. Great vid as always Bryan!

    • @pauls4522
      @pauls4522 Před 6 měsíci

      undervolting, or buying a very basic AIO could resolve issues too. but I guess thats a moot suggestion because buying an AIO for a 3600 would have been excessive for a budget 6 core cpu.

    • @m8x425
      @m8x425 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@pauls4522 IDK.... I put the Thermalright Peerless Assassin with a Ryzen 5700x and I could not pay it enough for it to go over 60c. Thermals were in the 50's once I used a voltage offset.... and that's running Cinebench r23 that uses the CPU much more than any game will.
      The Arctic eSports cooler is okay but not very good. It's more ideal for those old i7 processors like the 6700k. Those may have had a 91w TDP, but they'd use maybe 50w while gaming and 65w under stress.

    • @sydus81599
      @sydus81599 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@pauls4522 a budget 240 is like a hundred bucks, I ran a corsair i110 on a 3600 for years and it never went past 50° under load

  • @peternedermann6751
    @peternedermann6751 Před rokem +54

    I'm using this CPU since its introduction to the market, and quickly I have realised that you can optimise it with Ryzen Master too: I can set whatever TDP target I like (usually 55W for transcoding, and 65W for gaming). Also set the "CPU Boost override" to its maximum 200Mhz value (so it drives speeds that much higher with the same voltage). This setup works very well even for the stock cooler :)

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +2

      or just buy a better cooler and get more from your 3600🤣🤣🤣 or turn on vsync🤣🤣🤣

    • @Jafmanz
      @Jafmanz Před rokem +1

      @@raven4k998 you want him to spend more money? STFU!

    • @peternedermann6751
      @peternedermann6751 Před rokem +10

      @@raven4k998 Both are valid advice! :) And I do follow them: I have a Brocken 3 for a few years now (bought for the 2700 originally) , and I always turn on vsynch (I just prefer it that way, and don't care much about the potential latency increase). And yet I still use Ryzen Master the way I described above: in games there is no speed loss (because it is never 100% on all 12 threads), and in transcoding, I can live with the 10-15% speed loss (if that) for much lower temps & silence :)

    • @starnoelle8248
      @starnoelle8248 Před 8 měsíci

      exactly get an ag400 or something similar for $20 and can use on future higher end cpus that will make quick work of cooling an r5 3600

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Před rokem +136

    Reminder to everyone that your Ryzen 3000 is probably not that old and that the warranty is three years. Check if you can RMA if yours goes bad.
    If you are in Australia, you may be able to argue that the lifespan is too short with the ACCC if your CPU fails shortly after the expiration of the warranty period.

    • @p4radigm989
      @p4radigm989 Před rokem

      dont be ridiculous. this video was stupid. 3600s are not failing at all.

    • @MarcoGPUtuber
      @MarcoGPUtuber Před rokem +17

      @@p4radigm989 It is ridiculous to let people know they have a warranty if their CPU fails? lol

    • @p4radigm989
      @p4radigm989 Před rokem +13

      @@MarcoGPUtuber no, but they are not failing any more than any other CPUs if cooled improperly. This Tech YES video was clickbait BS.

    • @MarcoGPUtuber
      @MarcoGPUtuber Před rokem +10

      @@p4radigm989 So why are you bothering me about it then?

    • @p4radigm989
      @p4radigm989 Před rokem +8

      @@MarcoGPUtuber because you are my son. I need to protect you from fake news

  • @heilong79
    @heilong79 Před rokem +137

    Strange, my 3600 was a great CPU and was always cool, I only recently upgraded to a 5800x and was surprised how much hotter it was.

    • @examen1996
      @examen1996 Před rokem +9

      ditto with my old 3700x and my new 5900x , using the same noctua nh-d14 the difference is huuge

    • @weasle2904
      @weasle2904 Před rokem +3

      I have a NH-D14 and went from a 3600 to a 5800x3d and get the same temps lol! After using curve optimizer of course

    • @valentin3186
      @valentin3186 Před rokem +7

      You are comparing a 6-core cpu with a Single-CCD 8-core cpu

    • @ponytoast1231
      @ponytoast1231 Před rokem +8

      You should down volt the 5800x, that's what I do, it decrease it running temp by like 10-20 celsius with no drop in performance keeping all the core at 4.6ghz. The 5800x has the same voltage as the 5900 but with 2/3 of the cores so each core has way too much current going through it for no reason since the cores are also the same. A 5600 has 65 tdp for 6 cores, a 5900 has 105 tdp for 12 cores, the 5800 has 105 tdp for 8 cores. That's 10.8 tdp per core for the 5600, 8.75 for the 5900 and 13.125 for the 5800.

    • @BloodmoonPyke
      @BloodmoonPyke Před rokem +2

      Damn I wanted to upgrade to a 5800x :(

  • @406mill
    @406mill Před rokem +24

    I'd be using hwinfo64 to check the power reporting deviation, this was an issue early on with motherboards shoving more voltage than reported. This was for the most part solved with BIOS updates but i'm sure there'll be countless boards running theses chips out there that were never updated to solve this problem.

  • @RRe36
    @RRe36 Před rokem +8

    From my experience the Precision Boost Overdrive settings under the tweaker settings on Asus aren't always doing its job at disabling it and you'd need to disable it under one of the AMD tabs in the advanced settings.
    The extreme overvolting with PBO has been a thing since first gen ryzen and has caused voltages of ~1.45V back then as well. Disabling it always had massive thermal and efficiency improvements while also lowering the voltage to more reasonable levels on every single ryzen system I have built so far (including anything from 1000 series to 5000 series), so I'm always disabling it because that little bit of extra performance doesn't seem worth the thermals and unhealthy voltages imho. I'm surprised that nobody really talked about that yet and, while I didn't test with any 7000 series CPU myself, I'm pretty sure that's what is mostly leading to the high temps everyone reported on the 7000 series launch. If anyone wants to verify that with a 7000 series CPU feel free to respond, am curious to see if it is indeed still the case.

    • @parakek390
      @parakek390 Před 6 měsíci +2

      yes exactly. average users and gamers do not need pbo. my 3600 with pbo on went as high as you said upto 1.45V and i didn't see any performance gain in gaming (by see i mean notice it, you can obviously compare with a benchmark but the negligible gains do not justify having pbo).
      with pbo disabled my 3600 would need just under 1v to operate to its max 3600mhz base clock and i could even lower the wraith stealth prism fan speed to 50% and would never need more for it to run cool and super quiet and very low power consumption too (even if i loaded all cores 100% for stress test it would stay around 70-80 degrees with fan still at 50%)
      the 3600 can easily handle even games like cyberpunk, red dead 2, etc... at 1440p with my 3060ti i had most high settings and gamed at 60 capped fps. i went not with the 5700x cause i gave my mother my good old 3600 but it's still great cpu for gaming

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Před 5 měsíci +1

      I'll check this, thanks for spending the time to write the comment, appreciate ya

  • @mr.chaidir4766
    @mr.chaidir4766 Před rokem +28

    In my experience, undervolt it from 1.4V to 1.2V do the trick. It seems the latest BIOS update make the CPU consume the power more than it actually needs and more power=more heat.

    • @tkd4
      @tkd4 Před rokem +2

      same i just put the voltage to - offset and temps dropped.

    • @QurttoRco
      @QurttoRco Před rokem

      ... mine will insta crash with anything more than 1.1v

    • @mrljgibson
      @mrljgibson Před 3 měsíci

      A lot of board manufacturers tell you which is the highest BIOS you should use for a particular CPU, so that's more than likely your issue.
      Read the support pages don't just go updating your BIOS.

  • @djtlh7335
    @djtlh7335 Před rokem +13

    i see that you tested this ryzen 5 3600 with an a320 board and these problems appears, have you tried using a higher tier board like a b450 to see if the problem is still there?

  • @GENERiCmood
    @GENERiCmood Před rokem +16

    I have a 3600 from late 2019 as well paired with a Mugen 5 cooler. It's undervolted with a negative voltage offset set at -0.125 and while gaming it's always between 45c and 55c max. Pretty impressive indeed.

    • @annaaffkhan
      @annaaffkhan Před rokem +1

      bro do u live in a cold country

    • @jeromesimbulan1357
      @jeromesimbulan1357 Před rokem

      @@annaaffkhan just buy gammax gte v2 white deep cool

    • @eddiethehead5988
      @eddiethehead5988 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yes pretty impressive, you just need undervolting and a $60 cooler to keep it relatively cool lol

  • @my-yt-inputs2580
    @my-yt-inputs2580 Před rokem

    I'd be curious is undervolting first vs temp limiting would have been a better first choice. Then if needed you could use the temp limit function. Maybe at 80 instead of 70 though.

  • @bdhale34
    @bdhale34 Před rokem +30

    Your vcore was peaking at over 1.45v that is WAY too high for that silicon, these things aren't burning up they are being electrocuted to death by MB manufacturers trying to eek out more overclock headroom with higher voltages. What you did was not so much an under-volt as it was a fix of the motherboard's default over-volt.

    • @AliShaikh_744
      @AliShaikh_744 Před rokem +6

      The thing is that it appears that 3600s actually need that much voltage. My 3600 also runs at about the same voltage but the problem is that I can only undervolt by about 12.5mv before I start getting BSODs while gaming (in easy to run games at 120 FPS). For reference, my Vega 64 runs at an undervolt of -150mv pretty much without losing performance. I suspect the worst dies were turned into 3600s as yields on the 8 core Ryzen 3000 chiplet should have been pretty high. So 3600s need a ton of voltage to operate correctly.

    • @majorgg66
      @majorgg66 Před rokem

      Yeah, being electrocuted and reddit and any other places are not filled with unhappy customers that their CPU and mb are frying like crazy. It's almost like amd engineers knew how to design a CPU properly.

  • @heyitsjel
    @heyitsjel Před rokem +22

    Interesting video Bryan.
    This is actually pretty disappointing if it's the case (higher temps), given their relatively young age. Many CPU's in the past (eg. Intel 14nm++++ coffee lake; comet lake) would frequently hit these temps and not fail prematurely, so this is something AMD needs to look into - especially if the chips aren't thermal throttling and staying within AMD's design window. It seriously makes me wonder if it's a long term high voltage issue (eg. certain manufacturers over-volting by default), or if it's related to increased rates of degradation of the TSMC 7nm node at extended elevated temperatures/voltages...
    The 2080Ti you previously tested with is significantly more powerful than the RX 6600, so you would expect temps would have been equal/higher running that card.

  • @MarkHyde
    @MarkHyde Před rokem +21

    As an owner of a Ryzen 5 3600 (and A320 mb) this has got me intrigued - admittedly I've got an aftermarket air/fan cooler. I haven't seen any kind of temps like this. Thanks for this investigation. Love your content :)

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +2

      yeah try upgrading your cooler for better temps simple🤣

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Před 5 měsíci

      Omg same 😅 I'm using an Hyper 212 hope I'm fine.

    • @slaydog5102
      @slaydog5102 Před 3 měsíci

      Same

  • @1Fracino
    @1Fracino Před rokem

    Hi, a short while before the bad thing happened I bought an Alpha-sync pre-built (Mid-atx case, Amd 3600, 16Gb DDR4 and a 5700xt), which I've never even booted up, due to sad things happening. Was thinking about using it lately but now seeing Your Vid and just hearing about this problem right now I'm having second thoughts & wondering about quick solutions.
    Do you think I'd be better off trying a beefier cooler or maybe just try flashing the BIOS and dropping in a 5600 instead?
    If not, should I replace the thermal compound on the CPU and Disassemble the 5700xt and replace the pads and the thermal compound on the gpu? Will that stuff be ok after sitting there for a few years? Many thanks for any reply :)

  • @dog_knight
    @dog_knight Před rokem +34

    In my experience, the Ryzen 3000 series have usually run pretty cool and have been easy to cool. I am wondering if the TIM has started failing after a couple years of use. As they are soldered, its not exactly easy to check. Need Roman to pull one of these excessively hot CPU's apart.

    • @shempeym
      @shempeym Před rokem

      I'm thinking the same thing. It's probably expanding and contracting a lot

  • @ryguymods
    @ryguymods Před rokem +16

    I noticed this back in 2020 with my 3600 CPU, The stealth cooler just wasn't up to the task so i replaced it for a prism rgb and also undervolted it slightly, the temp were night and day difference!

    • @rockjianrock
      @rockjianrock Před rokem

      Yeahhhh 3600 + prism gang

    • @areyouavinalaughisheavinal5328
      @areyouavinalaughisheavinal5328 Před 10 měsíci

      I've just ordered one of these from amazon, gutted to find there are issues with them an hour after clicking pay. The bundle is coming direct from ADMI as a preassembled thing, so do you think it might come with settings changed if they know there are issues?

  • @BlabberizeYT
    @BlabberizeYT Před rokem

    I had a 3700x that was intermittently blue screening randomly and found changing PBO from "auto" to "enable" on an Asrock x570 seemed to help my issue. I was testing settings with Ryzen Master before I commited the changes to the bios. So I know this sounds weird but trying to go from "auto" for PBO to "enabled", which should be the same, may change your results as it did for me.

  • @Wildfire86872
    @Wildfire86872 Před 6 měsíci +1

    When I built this computer I did a R5 3600XT with Wraith Prism on B450M, and it currently has a 1070ti GPU (started with an RX5700XT, but one long DCS session croaked it under warranty. Got it repaired, and it croaked again just browsing the web, so I had it repaired again, but bought the used 1070).
    I haven't done much gaming on it yet, but on warmer days the package temperature will briefly spike to over 80 just browsing on the web, which has kept me from really trying out some games (I built it with DCS World in mind). I was thinking maybe the thermal paste wasn't spread good enough, but could this be the issue and this solution work?

  • @118Shadow118
    @118Shadow118 Před rokem +13

    Checked mine out of curiosity. In Cinebench R23 it got 9173 for multi and 1231 for single and temps were around 65°C. I do have slightly better than stock cooling though (BeQuiet! Shadow Rock 2). I bought the 3600 in March 2020, so I've had it for almost 3 years

    • @techyescity
      @techyescity  Před rokem +6

      Thanks for posting your numbers, those temps are great.

  • @bulutcagdas1071
    @bulutcagdas1071 Před rokem +5

    I noticed that 5600X with the included default cooler would go up to 90 degrees regularly when gaming. I just opted to buy a big Be Quiet cooler and after that the CPU never got over 67 degrees even under 100% load when compressing and decompressing files for half an hour.

    • @bulutcagdas1071
      @bulutcagdas1071 Před rokem +1

      @@WarbandGames I try to avoid liquid cooling when possible but for high end stuff it's kind of necessary.

  • @MrRoko91
    @MrRoko91 Před rokem +1

    It was something similar even with my i7 6700k. Default voltages were 1.375 while it could run comfortably at 1.200. First thing I did 6 years ago to undervolt and its still running strong almost 7 years later.

  • @j.lietka9406
    @j.lietka9406 Před rokem

    Is this happening more often with Win 11? Or frequently over clocking? Have a PC I am hoping to put together soon, using the 3600.

  • @ghosttheoremproductions5469

    In the US, the Thermalright Assassin is often on Amazon for $17-25 even for the RGB versions. I use it on a lot of PC builds.

    • @busterscrugs
      @busterscrugs Před rokem +2

      was going to say, the assassin 120 is a much better deal and you don't have to wait for it to ship from china.

  • @L3THALFORC3
    @L3THALFORC3 Před rokem +18

    Put a good cooler on it and change your fan profile in the bios , keep an eye and set a max voltage if needed but I find temps are fine with a good board and cooler

    • @bdhale34
      @bdhale34 Před rokem +1

      If the voltage is too high, and it objectively is on a good deal of motherboards at default. Keeping it cool won't save it, the temps aren't what's hurting it the excess voltage is.

    • @gorjy9610
      @gorjy9610 Před rokem

      @@bdhale34 temperature also doesn't help. It impact semiconductor life since...well, since first transistor ever made.

    • @420rvidxr
      @420rvidxr Před rokem +3

      @@bdhale34 what are you talking about? AMD itself has said that those 1.4v spikes are normal, if you set Manually those 1.4v everytime it's obvious you're going to hurt your CPU
      Keeping it cool makes it last longer and Will save it

    • @BrickTop1
      @BrickTop1 Před rokem +2

      ​@@bdhale34 Not true, AMD itself stated their stock voltage powerspikes are safe. However, who knows if they lied.

    • @L3THALFORC3
      @L3THALFORC3 Před rokem +1

      @@bdhale34 need good vrm with ryzen chips i have 4 x 3600 and 2 5600x cpu and voltages and temps are stable, max temps under load are 72 deg c and max voltages are 1.35-1.4v on the 3600's , the 5600x have slightly less voltages out of the box applied and subsequently run a little cooler, also all my chips are under hyper 212 air coolers and they do the job perfect, the std ryzen coolers are junk for any intensive purpose.remember amd put out a statement regarding voltages in the ryzen line and operating temps when chips were released.
      good luck :-)

  • @ThePioCea
    @ThePioCea Před rokem +1

    Not sure if it can help, but I noticed that most 3000 CPUs push voltage way above 1.35V with BIOS auto settings. I always undervolt them by at least 0.1V with negative offset, even if I have a decent cooler on. Temperatures might be fine, but I'm not that comfortable having those cores getting over 1.325V going through. This doesn't happen with 5000 series CPU.

  • @ravengray7946
    @ravengray7946 Před rokem

    Huge help! Thank you so much!💯

  • @junethefirst
    @junethefirst Před rokem +4

    I've had a variety of 3000 and 5000 Ryzens and an offset undervolt between minus 0.050V and minus 0.075V is almost compulsory for sane temperatures. Never used hard temperature limits though.

  • @mal2261
    @mal2261 Před rokem +5

    Greg Salazar also has some videos running to similar issues with Ryzen 3000 series

  • @greggregson9687
    @greggregson9687 Před rokem

    Question: Do the APU's with the monolithic die run cooler than the chiplet designs? 5600G vs 5600/x?

  • @bfbunny
    @bfbunny Před rokem +9

    I think the problem lies with stock voltages rather than high temperatures (although the two are correlated somewhat). On my own Ryzen 5 3600 + CVN X570M platform, the motherboard will push 1.475V into the CPU by default, and I think that is the main cause of this degradation. I had got it tuned in to run at 0.86V and 3.4Ghz by default, and manually going into the Ryzen master to push it to 4.2Ghz all core with 1.16V sometimes, and so far, its overclocking potential hasn't degraded much from the three years of use while temps look great. I think the issue lies with the difference between the earlier batches of Ryzen 5 3600 and later ones, which uses a more refined 7nm process that require much less voltage to run at the same clocks. Motherboard manufacturers want their board to work out of the box with all those Zen 2 chips, regardless of their silicon quality, and that could be the reason behind the aggressive voltages, but when the chips themselves improve to a point that it don't need that, it just became a factor that drove the power and temperature up and efficiency down, while eating away at the lifespan (TSMC recommends a max of 1.3V for these chips, and some motherboards go way past that). Those unstable Ryzen 5 3600 that you have might be a result of a normal computer user leaving the motherboard bios to regulate the voltages delivered to the CPU, and over time it just tears away at the silicon quality.

    • @MaxIronsThird
      @MaxIronsThird Před 7 měsíci +1

      Be careful with Ryzen master, the voltage set there is actually about 30mV higher than when set in Bios, so your 4.2Ghz at 1.16V, is more like 1.19V.

  • @mattg8888
    @mattg8888 Před rokem +3

    PBO was actually a huge deal for me. After turning it off my voltages dropped a lot and so did temperature. I guess YMMV. Anyways, I undervolted to 1.25, overclocked to 4.2 all core and I have my very old NH-U12P on it. Now it doesn't crack 70°C even under sustained 100% load.

  • @DontReadMyProfilePicture473

    All you need to do now is just put a good cooler to be honest

    • @spreadinglove648
      @spreadinglove648 Před rokem

      yea so the CPU dosen't overheat

    • @mapesdhs597
      @mapesdhs597 Před rokem

      @@spreadinglove648 This won't help if the mbd BIOS is consistently pushing too much voltage aswell though, which may be more the relevant issue here. However, without a larger sample size and in addition testing with a decent B450, it's hard to be certain.

  • @diysai
    @diysai Před rokem

    I replaced the stock cooler on day one, after I heard the jet engine sound right after booting. Will a Deepcool Gammaxx 400 be good enough?

  • @luizferrarezzi
    @luizferrarezzi Před rokem

    by the way which temps should I take in consideration? the CPU (tctl/tdie) at 75c or Cpu CCD1(tdie) at 80c on HWInfo when playing death stranding? for some reason everything is 5c colder than that on cinebench

  • @vampula12
    @vampula12 Před rokem +7

    Bro, those voltages that you showed are CRAZY! My 3600 runs with 975mv while 3750mhz , temps - 50° max in cinebench r20.
    Undervolt is a MUST!
    At the same time my second machine with 5700x runs 1008mv, 4250mhz, 55°
    Saving that silicon for the children to inherit it lol

    • @AndrewTSq
      @AndrewTSq Před rokem +2

      if you remember at launch, we had problems with high voltages on 3600 and zen2. mine was doing like 1.4v. it was fixed by agesa from amd later on.

  • @joey_f4ke238
    @joey_f4ke238 Před rokem +6

    I find that undervolting is almost mandatory with some motherboards, i had a msi b450 board and it overshot quite a bit with the voltages and i quickly came to realize that undervolting was way more rational than attemting to oc that cpu since vdrop control was terrible and the ryzen 2600 did oc like shit so i would end up in the high 70's only to barely get 4ghz with a 240mm aio.
    I have found that ryzen really likes to work around 1.1-1.2v cpu vcore so if you see that spike to over 1.3 or even hit 1.4v then definitely try to undervolt because that is just too much

    • @kidskid8210
      @kidskid8210 Před rokem

      Question my cpu voltage is at 1.1v never oc mine and i have a r5 5600x. i have the stock cooler and repasted it with arctis mx-5, whenever i play wz2 the temps goes upto 70degrees and voltage at 98%, is that normal?

    • @joey_f4ke238
      @joey_f4ke238 Před rokem

      @@kidskid8210 As long as it is 1.3v or lower and temps are normal it should be fine. If yours is at 1.1 that seems pretty good

  • @Sitaa
    @Sitaa Před rokem

    very good video, that made me wonders as i do have a 3600 but with a Dark Rock Pro 4 (i originally planned to use the Wraith Stealth coming with it but i remember the cpu being thermal throttled very fast as it would hit 95c instantly ingame and ordered a DRP4 right away) , and even with that cooler i get close to 80c temps in game like Apex (5-10 higher in summer) is that not normal then ?

  • @alexanderpopov3587
    @alexanderpopov3587 Před 6 měsíci

    Very helpful. I’ve had a problem with stability of my 3600 in a SF PC and tried different methods as you did. Limiting by temperature only did not solve the problem, but limiting the power as well (to 45W) did. Still no CPU limited in Cyberpunk with ray tracing in 1440 or Diablo IV in 4k/120Hz HDR with RTX 4070ti

  • @Seppe1106
    @Seppe1106 Před rokem +17

    Changed from a 2600 to a 5600x both using a Dark Rock 4. Pretty impressive, the 5600x with curve optimized OC performs so much better while staying cooler than the 2600.
    Absolute worthy upgrade.
    While being on it, I also repasted my GPU that was running extremely hot looking at the Hot Spot temperature. Dropped the °C by 20-30° depending on the game. Feels like an entirely new PC x)

  • @conyo985
    @conyo985 Před rokem +20

    This is what I do with my 3600. Just an offset of -0.072 mV and the temps are in control. Also using a tower cooler helps. Still using the deepcool gammaxx 400.

    • @nedjimb0
      @nedjimb0 Před rokem +6

      Gammaxx 400 has been one of the best budget tower coolers for over half a decade now.

    • @bdhale34
      @bdhale34 Před rokem +3

      Have one of those cooling my 11700f running 4.4 indefinite boost, never sees over 72c, amazing cooler for the price.

    • @salmon_wine
      @salmon_wine Před rokem +2

      @@nedjimb0 dude i took mine off when i upgraded from an i5-10400f to my i5-11500, and one of the plastic mounts finally snapped and broke :( best cpu cooler i will ever find for for less than $25, can't really find the LGA1200 version for cheap anymore. Ended up getting a Cooler Master 212 Black Edition cuz its all that my local Best Buy will stock for non-AIO's lmao

    • @LatvianVideo
      @LatvianVideo Před rokem +2

      @@nedjimb0 im on the gammaxx 300 on mine and my brothers rig, cools just fine and is quite cheap.

    • @LatvianVideo
      @LatvianVideo Před rokem +1

      @@dc-gm7lu Damn, on my ryzen 3 1200 pc with an OC to 3.8ghz @ 1.3v, it fine.
      My brothers pc with a 3600x (or 3700x, cant recall) is probably fine, as I havent heard complaints and my laptop with a 5600H has been fine, the problems in it are other things, lol

  • @Ax4400
    @Ax4400 Před rokem

    Thanks for the video, will try those settings on my TUF B450M + AMD3600 CPU got so hot w/o a load it scared me & I shut it down right away. Have to see if I can follow your instructions with transcripts. FYI your links to ali express aren't working for me in America?

  • @user-vp5lb2cu9n
    @user-vp5lb2cu9n Před 6 měsíci

    Hi, I just buy a used ryzen 5 3600 and now after im seeing this I am a bit confused if a wraith Spire will be enough to cool this cpu. Fortunately I get this cooler instead of a wraith stealth so I think it will be ok or should I use a aftermarket cooler ? I will use it mostly for FPS games with a GTX 1070 or something like that and is a b450 motherboard a good pairing in mind if I will upgrade later for a ryzen 5000 CPU?

  • @83RhalataShera
    @83RhalataShera Před rokem +10

    These temperatures were always present with the absolutely INADEQUATE Wraith Stealth. As someone who is still running a 3600 since 2019 I have always recommended people to get a better cooler than the included one even a 20 USD tower cooler keeps the 3600 safely under 70 C in 100% usage on stock settings.
    It always really bothered me how many tech channels (don't remember if TYC did that too tbh) and people on the internet played up the 3600's included cooler as adequate and an advantage over Intel at the time, the reality is that those coolers should have been used at most for a couple weeks until you get a cooler if you can't get one right away.

    • @scarfaceReaper
      @scarfaceReaper Před rokem

      So it's just the temps not anything other to major right and what cooler do you think I should use for the r5 3600 ?

    • @EliezYT
      @EliezYT Před rokem +1

      You would think they would pair up the new Ryzen 5 7600 with a spire but no they have to give the bare bones.

    • @dyyylllaannn
      @dyyylllaannn Před rokem +2

      naw it's not the cooler...

    • @EliezYT
      @EliezYT Před rokem +1

      @@dyyylllaannn You do have to admit though it is part of problem it’s not the best compares to the spire or prism.

    • @83RhalataShera
      @83RhalataShera Před rokem

      @@scarfaceReaper I can recommend the SilentiumPC Fera 5 if it is available in your country. Arctic freezer 34 eSports is also good.

  • @FoxvoxDK
    @FoxvoxDK Před rokem +4

    Takeaways from this is not just efficiency tuning, but also, do not skimp on your CPU cooler - basically any 20-30$ cooler will vastly outperform Prism and Spire.
    Don't go over the Hz of your screen FPS wise, unless you're pushing for absolute minimum latency, it's inefficient.

  • @macking104
    @macking104 Před rokem

    did you update BIOS… noticed on screen it was a 2021 version while on asus website newest was version 6042 from 2022… did you update chipset drivers? tried cpu on a different motherboard?

  • @leexgx
    @leexgx Před rokem +1

    I had problems with performance bias set to auto (does a small Overclock to the CPU) but seems to be having a problem on that cpu or bad bios thermal throttling (lack of it in automatic mode)

  • @cppctek
    @cppctek Před rokem +3

    You are an absolute legend for figuring this out. I really have seen a huge influx of dead ryzen cpus esp 3600’s. Have you seen ones fail that were on an aio?

    • @SomeDude0881
      @SomeDude0881 Před rokem

      The mounting pressure of a lot of coolers is wrong. So the cooler flexes the board socket

    • @techyescity
      @techyescity  Před rokem

      Haven't seen any fail with AIOs yet. All the ones I heard of were with wraith stealths.

  • @tofuguru941
    @tofuguru941 Před rokem +5

    This is a great video on so many levels for the AMD community!
    I have ALWAYS underclocked AMD equipment.
    CPU and GPU.
    I've always got lower temps and higher performance due to the clock map where it detects that the temps are lower therefore it will increase the frequency as long as it's stable.
    I haven't found a need to limit my equipment thermally, but undervolting alone is fantastic.
    I even do the same to my ram and run vigorous tests to make sure it can still pass memtest.
    Example, if my ram can run 3600Mhz CL16 @ 1.2v, but crashes at 1.15v, I'll set it to 1.25v for some overhead stability. Saving me from needing to run 1.35 rated voltage.
    This will reduce the heat on the motherboard & case, as well as the load on your motherboard and PSU. Every little bit counts.
    I used to be of the mindset of just brute-forcing things to max and ramping fans up, but after reaching points of diminishing returns and reducing life expectancy, it just isn't worth it anymore.

  • @FrgottenFrshness
    @FrgottenFrshness Před rokem +1

    the snowman cooler sure had a wobbly looking fan when you showed it with the fan spinning

  • @theb4r138
    @theb4r138 Před rokem +1

    Great video. I’m definitely have it issues keeping the 5800x3D much below 80 when gaming even with a 240 rad custom loop

  • @creed5248
    @creed5248 Před rokem +3

    I bought a few wraith prisms and they are great for 3700X and below . I just like the design and the looks . Blows some air around the socket and Vrms too .

  • @daytimerocker3808
    @daytimerocker3808 Před rokem

    Hey Bryan have u tried any x58 Xeons with the new warzone 2.0? would love to know how they perform since its so cpu heavy

  • @jabulanimahlangu6863
    @jabulanimahlangu6863 Před rokem

    Is it advisable to apply your recommended settings on AMD 5 3600 DDR4 64GIG with GTX1060, Tuf gaming X470 pro Motherboard

  • @SgtRock4445
    @SgtRock4445 Před rokem +8

    Haven't had any issues with my 3600. Ran it with pbo on, auto oc on and i think a small under volt. It was on a b450 tomahawk(non max) with a cooler master ml240 aio. Replaced it with a 5800x3d last month. Will keep an eye on the temps when I repurpose the 3600.

  • @lunaraura2828
    @lunaraura2828 Před rokem +11

    Motherboard BIOS should have 3 standard settings. "Load optimized" "Load Minimum" and "Load Manufacturer Spec"

  • @jmssun
    @jmssun Před 6 měsíci

    1:06 what is the name of this tool to display and monitor the CPU temps?

  • @debugliu2180
    @debugliu2180 Před rokem +2

    There is an option named CPB in BIOS which is ON by default.
    Turn it off if too hot or too loud, then CPU will maintain at 3.6GHz quietly.

  • @jo05dk
    @jo05dk Před rokem +3

    So.. The way to fix a hot running CPU, and not lose performance, is - as it always has been - to use a good cooler? Gotcha. I'll keep doing that then. Good of you to raise awareness about the issue though. For the many people who think all is well, if it was well when they build or bought their PC, this is important info.

    • @Fucklesticks
      @Fucklesticks Před 7 měsíci +1

      Undervolting aswell. I did it back when i had an I7 920 and now with a 5800x3d, great results.

  • @allmybasketsinoneegg
    @allmybasketsinoneegg Před rokem +8

    As a long term 3600 user, I found that the poor cpu, under stock settings, tends to get blasted with way more voltage than it needs. Undervolting should be the first step. If you have a limited bios, I'd recommend Clock Tuner Ryzen to set some p1 and p2 profiles. You should be able to have your cake and eat it too.
    I'm also aware that my cpu is a golden sample (I think it's a downbinned 3600xt), so I wont share the exact settings I use as most 3600's wont be able to keep up.
    However a cautious starting point would be:
    P2 (trigger at 10% cpu usage) 4200 MHz @ 1300 mV
    P1 (trigger at 50% cpu usage) 4000 MHz @ 1150 mV
    CTR has an automatic idle state it should default to if cpu usage is below the (trigger usage) value for P2. The values are very rough guide lines, and might be too aggressive still. Or you'll find more headroom to raise clocks further or to lower the voltage. Having a better cooler will also improve the speeds for any given voltage, or allow you to lower the voltages.
    CTR has a "tune" button that's tempting to press, but for me it has never produced any beneficial results. It seems to think my cpu can hit 4.7 GHz. It cannot. Maybe you'll have more luck, but it takes forever to run.

  • @NFIGamingZone
    @NFIGamingZone Před rokem

    Undervolt -0.025 and I started to get random system freeze... I stopped the Turbo boost and I got a more silent fan and a similar performance with temperature not higher than 80° C on the CPU, in a room that have temps between 22-28° C.

  • @wallychambe1587
    @wallychambe1587 Před rokem

    Have you updated to the newest chip-set driver?? I keep my chipset drivers updated all the time!!

  • @Flameboi900
    @Flameboi900 Před rokem +10

    If you are wondering why the cpu is so hot out of the box, it’s because of the voltage on ryzen 3rd generation boost was only achieved by excessive voltage in excess of 1.4v and it has been a problem ever since launch and amd claims it’s fine, but in reality it’s not and not only causes high temperatures but also causes cpu degradation. In my personal experience working with this CPU, and other third generation CPUS is the best bet you can do is a manual overclock and then setting the voltage as low as it can go before it crashes. For example, I took my friend’s Ryzen 5 3600 and manually overclocked it to 4ghz locked and then got the voltage down as low as 1.36v and his temps on the stock cooler dropped by 17c which is incredible and will really keep the cpu going for years to come.

  • @kajurn791
    @kajurn791 Před rokem +8

    Like other people mentioned, the problem is the voltage that some mobos apply on them. Usually way past what one would call redline for these CPUs. The solution is RMA, but if it was me i'd seriously consider upgrading because the 3600 aged really poorly, it can't get 60 FPS on Kingdom Come deliverance max settings or No Man's Sky and has mediocre lows in games like Elden Ring and i doubt it'll handle these newer PS5 games (Hogwards's legacy?) well with how close in performance it is to the consoles, at least if you care about open world games which it won't handle very well.

    • @broken1965
      @broken1965 Před rokem

      I agree it's the cheaper mb and running in high ambient TURN ON THE AC

    • @jnightmare2386
      @jnightmare2386 Před rokem

      i havent had any problems with mine playing games plays skyrim heavly moded monster hunter witcher 3 all highest

    • @kajurn791
      @kajurn791 Před rokem

      @@jnightmare2386 I call BS on that modded skyrim claim there, quite sure it'll drop below 60 at any point where draw calls reach the neighborhood of 7500 which with heavily modded skyrim is everywhere, even with a 12600k it struggles to keep 60 at 9k draw calls, as long as you use a grass mod + dyndolod and ENB you're not running 60FPS on skyrim with a 3600, only in interiors. And MH i can break the 75FPS mark on a 3400G with max settings so that's not exactly a demanding title. Witcher 3? Maybe DX11 witcher 3, a PS4 game from 7 years ago, which i can also hit 120 FPS on a 3400G. The titles i mentioned are WAY more demanding than those you did, apples to oranges.

  • @federicocatelli8785
    @federicocatelli8785 Před 7 měsíci

    What's the safe temp (long term usage) for newer Intel cpus?

  • @AdamsWorlds
    @AdamsWorlds Před rokem

    Wonder if these were used on x570 or similar boards from that series prior to getting faulty. When x570 launched it needed a bios update as AGESA was having issues pegging power and clocks to the max and other things. If someone was an early adopter and never updated the BIOS then this would have been happening for years! I am not sure if this issue was with older boards and the 3000 series CPU or if it was locked to the newer boards with a 3000 series chip. This might have also been an issue on much older boards without a bios update also (probably was) and i bet this is the main cause of all this. I remember my x570 and 3800x was pegged to 1.4v+ on the CPU and if i stressed the CPU having temps spike upto 90. After a Updating the bios and nothing else this was all sorted though. Some software such as iCue also caused the power/temp to spike as it was constantly inspecting the cpu asking for sensor data.

  • @Bdot888
    @Bdot888 Před rokem +12

    I loved my 3600x because it was my first solid cpu. My first pc had a fx 6300 and while it could play esports titles, it was lacking in newer more demanding games. The 3600x was a breath of fresh air compared to that and it treated me well from 2020-2022. I ended up going with a 5700x recently and while that wasn't as big of a jump as the fx 6300 to the 3600x was, it still was a solid upgrade because its a power efficient 8 core chip and runs cool. I just got a noctua nh-u12s redux a couple days ago to pair with it, and my temps and noise is way better than my wraith spire cooler was on my 3600x. My 3600x will always have a place in my heart though. I will probably find a friend or relative to give it to so it can have a new life instead of sitting on a shelf

    • @TheTryingDutchman
      @TheTryingDutchman Před rokem +1

      I started with 2013's AMD FM2+ socket, cpu A-10 6800k (total garbage)
      Than got the Ryzen 3600 when it launched.
      And upgrades that to a 5700x last week :)

    • @Bdot888
      @Bdot888 Před rokem +1

      @@TheTryingDutchman oh wow i can only imagine the feeling you got when you first booted up the 3600! I could tell a difference right away by just scrolling around in windows. Its crazy how much AMD cpus have come in just the past 5-10 years. AM4 has had great longevity!

    • @TheTryingDutchman
      @TheTryingDutchman Před rokem +1

      @@Bdot888 yup, the difference was huge, and am4 was/is indeed an awesome platform! Enjoy :D

  • @theshadowoftruth7561
    @theshadowoftruth7561 Před 6 měsíci +13

    Ryzen CPUs have a history of being over volted. Always under volt them.

  • @frankcross2297
    @frankcross2297 Před rokem

    Wonder if there is a mounting issue? My 5800x has no issues in a standard 250mm AIO.

  • @nivea878
    @nivea878 Před rokem

    whats de difference PBO or manually set - offset voltage? i never had AMD. on my intel i know just undervolting mode

  • @retro_ross4241
    @retro_ross4241 Před rokem +7

    My ryzen 5 3600 regularly hit 80-90 degrees with the wraith stealth since day one. Bought an aftermarket cooler and applied an undervolt, allowing the CPU to stay under 75 degrees at max load (50-60 degrees during gaming sessions). Happy I made this decision, because performance remains unaffected after 3+ years.

  • @technetwork2707
    @technetwork2707 Před rokem +3

    I have a 3600x and it suddenly died after 4 years of usage. Have a liquid cooler kraken z73 though. Thanks for this vdo.

    • @pixels_per_inch
      @pixels_per_inch Před 11 měsíci +1

      Same here, though I was using hyper 212 evo on one of the systems. Both died after 3 years with only 2 months separating them even though they had different motherboards and cooler.

  • @Wrublos212
    @Wrublos212 Před rokem +1

    There are programs for adjusting frequency/voltage automatically for Ryzen 2 and up for each core separately. Probably not for not OC boards. Linus made video about it, it can make cpu a little faster and energy efficient.

  • @coniferousbug2395
    @coniferousbug2395 Před rokem

    I am not good with BIOS settings....but would it be okay if I download a software like "QuickCPU" and then just adjust to a "CPU Balance Performance" settings in order not to have a high CPU temps?

  • @gucky4717
    @gucky4717 Před rokem +4

    I want to say a few things. OC is not always OC. Different manufactorers have different boost values in their bioses. Some are higher, some lower. There was a commotion in the past for CPU reviews, that had an extra boost on certain boards, thus giving different results.

  • @ausfoodgarden
    @ausfoodgarden Před rokem +6

    A little undervolting and good cooling can make your CPU last for decades and you are so right about the low-end coolers not cutting it as software demands more from the CPU.
    Even my old daily driver - just used for email CZcams etc. has had a cooler upgrade. It was just an i5 with stock cooler and I noticed the temps were starting to get quite high.
    Now all is good and cool again.
    And for all you guys out there who do not clean your rig regularly, remember dust = heat!

    • @boating2strokenovice726
      @boating2strokenovice726 Před rokem

      Undervolting is not what you want to do. Death Stranding is an AVX instruction game which demands higher voltage for 64 bit compression.

    • @ausfoodgarden
      @ausfoodgarden Před rokem

      @@boating2strokenovice726 What? I'm not talking about a single mediocre game. I'm saying that it's the best way to prolong the life of your system.

    • @boating2strokenovice726
      @boating2strokenovice726 Před rokem +1

      @@ausfoodgarden The game in question in this video. Death Stranding is an AVX instruction game. Which means requiring 64 bit compression from (2) 32 bit buss lanes from the system ram requires more milivoltage to the CPU.
      Lowering the clock speed of the cpu is the only thing you can do with AVX instruction titled games. Compromising the voltage in AVX games causes a loss to CPU texture rendering:

  • @papagaly
    @papagaly Před rokem

    Thank you my man ! I just bought a R5 3600 and i got constant blue screens and errors , restarts . I’m hoping this can help me .

  • @Nothatez
    @Nothatez Před 7 měsíci

    This video was really helpful and on point thanks man.

  • @subbookkeeper
    @subbookkeeper Před rokem +8

    3600s are dropping like flies from what I've seen. Usually after 2 years of usage.

    • @emeraldcc3061
      @emeraldcc3061 Před 8 měsíci

      I've had mine since 2019 and never have had a single problem

    • @shiftto
      @shiftto Před 8 měsíci

      you mean dropping what, which things?

  • @Hathal_98
    @Hathal_98 Před rokem +5

    If you are a 60fps player i recommend locking your fps to 60 in Nvidia control panel or Amd relive. The result of that is you gonna have a better gaming experience because the frame-time is gonna be more stable and your cpu is gonna have an easier time working because you are not asking a lot from it.

  • @nanielwolf5768
    @nanielwolf5768 Před rokem +1

    How the hell did it pull 80+W with PBO and performance mode disabled on a 65W TDP chip???
    My ryzen 3800x boosted to 4ghz was drawing below 90W and throttling to stay below 85C on a Prism cooler
    I dont get something or the problem is much more severe with some safety features just not working propertly

  • @proctoscopefilms
    @proctoscopefilms Před rokem

    To be clear, you used the wraith cooler and one exhaust fan in your system?

  • @daviddebroux4708
    @daviddebroux4708 Před rokem +2

    By default, my Ryzen 7 5800X was consistently hitting above 80C, sometimes ekeing towards 85C, where idle temps were at an elevated 50C - 60C. I thought that it was really obnoxious, and I did my due diligence in mounting the cooler correctly. Disabling PBO2 barely made a dent, but long story short almost everything was tied to Windows' power management settings and I just forced Windows to use the "Balanced" power plan, on top of just disabling PBO2. I don't think I made a manual thermal limit, but after setting everything that I think could made a huge difference, it went back down to the usual 25C - 32C idle temperatures, and never went above 45C - 50C (depending on season) when gaming. I have a Cryorig H5 Universal, and it should be more than capable of keeping that thing tamed.
    Seeing Ryzen 70xx series processors have 90C at idle as the "norm" was incredibly outrageous and inane of AMD to do. This is absolutely wrong. This is a huge signal to every other consumer that AMD is just continuing to, by default, overclock and maybe overvolt the shit out of their chips just to meet a specific performance improvement goal and appease their investors, and it isn't helping that most motherboard manufacturers tend to go a bit crazy with voltage settings, too. This is "fun" for overclockers, but the target audience should really be towards the average consumer.
    "90C is below the maximum operating temperature of 100C, therefore it's okay" is a *bad* excuse to make when selling a chip to most people, because that's when most thermal throttling should occur.

  • @Zarathustra-H-
    @Zarathustra-H- Před 6 měsíci +3

    A lot of motherboard vendors violate AMD's standards and overvolt the shit out of CPU's in order to try to win a few FPS in performance reviews. My Gigabyte TRX40 Aorus Master killed two Threadripper 3960x CPU's back in 2019 when it was new, at bone stock settings.
    This is a huge, well known problem and the Motherboard vendors keep doing it on purpose, it is not an unintentional bug, and it will damage CPU's. AMD needs to crack down on the board vendors.
    Some (but not all) motherboards vendors have responded to criticism by updating their BIOS to correct this issue, so the first thing people should do is to check for a newer BIOS. It might have been fixed.

  • @Bot.number.69420
    @Bot.number.69420 Před rokem

    I had weird pcie bugging on ryzen 5950X. Needed to lower voltage from cores and raise io voltage a bit. It happened after AMD made new microcode to new bios. That bios was just cooking the cores and io voltage was low. It caused pcie raid card to disappear from windows in file transfer and gpu made stutter in games, sometimes 1 sec pauses every 5 secs.

  • @jonson856
    @jonson856 Před rokem

    When ever I build a new rig I see if I can reduce the voltage to the CPU even if its just a little.

  • @jonathonrosalia9345
    @jonathonrosalia9345 Před rokem +3

    this leads me to wonder about the life expectancy of the new Ryzen 7000 cpus long term for gaming with them actually targeting 95c as a goal for the cpu what long term burn in is going to do to their clocks over time and if the new software amd runs is going to try to hide the dropping clocks from users

    • @SIW808
      @SIW808 Před rokem

      In games the temps are much lower than the 95c. They only reach that temp when you load all the cores and threads.

    • @jonathonrosalia9345
      @jonathonrosalia9345 Před rokem

      @@SIW808 that depends on the title and how much cpu load the game and resolution is forcing 1080p high refresh god of war is going to get your ryzen hot for one title unless you have it under liquid
      Death stranding is another good choice replicate them tech yes man’s benchmark

  • @f0x4nn3
    @f0x4nn3 Před rokem +4

    Mine did degrade with a decent cooler, so i think it's more then a temperature issue. I think it's just an combination of trash bin dies + high voltages.
    Your CB23 scores are on the low side tho, i get even at 3600mhz (turbo disabled) 8400 multi core and 9300 with turbo enabled.

  • @mmcgear4376
    @mmcgear4376 Před 7 měsíci

    the first time i bought my r5 3600 paired with asus tuf b450m board it keeps crashing for some reason. Ive checked everything that google suggested in which it might be the psu or ram or the drivers might be corrupted. but when i set the "EZ TUNING" at the bios to "performance", it fixed the issue and its working without BSOD for more than a year now. turns all the components were fine out of the box(they were all newly bought at that time) and the default settings of the cpu was causing it to crash after booting up (usually when browsing the internet or on idle)

  • @jokerbassXD
    @jokerbassXD Před rokem

    I'm running at 4.5ghz with 1.45v with like 50-60c on 360mm aio this is alright to my understanding correct?