How to keep your PC from HEATING up your room!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 9. 08. 2021
  • Learn more about Kioxia at www.kioxia.com/en-us/top.html
    BG4 - business.kioxia.com/en-us/ssd...
    XG6 - business.kioxia.com/en-us/ssd...
    CD6 - business.kioxia.com/en-us/ssd...
    CM6 - business.kioxia.com/en-us/ssd...
    Get your JayzTwoCents Merch Here! - www.jayztwocents.com
    ○○○○○○ Items featured in this video available at Amazon ○○○○○○
    ► Amazon US - bit.ly/1meybOF
    ► Amazon UK - amzn.to/Zx813L
    ► Amazon Canada - amzn.to/1tl6vc6
    ••• Follow me on your favorite Social Media! •••
    Facebook: / jayztwocents
    Twitter: / jayztwocents
    Instagram: / jayztwocents
    SUBSCRIBE! bit.ly/sub2JayzTwoCents
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @triparadox.c
    @triparadox.c Před 2 lety +1698

    I just play Squad on desert map. That way, I can just pretend the extreme heat is just ultra realistic, limited time, patch by the devs during Summer.

  • @agc2801
    @agc2801 Před 2 lety +1594

    Alternative title: How to save in the winter while gaming!

    • @mantalissdev
      @mantalissdev Před 2 lety +20

      Amogus

    • @wraht
      @wraht Před 2 lety +18

      I am curious about this. Does leaving your computer on idling (which is the cause of the Pre-Built PCs not being eligible for some states) cost more power or less power than the ridiculously inefficient baseboard heaters? Edit: and more specifically can it keep a room as warm in the winter as the baseboard heaters?

    • @Joe_1776
      @Joe_1776 Před 2 lety +8

      @@wraht baseboard heaters heat way more. Much bigger surface area. A Pc can heat up a 10x10 room just at a much slower rate, if there is no ventilation.

    • @Kyharra
      @Kyharra Před 2 lety +4

      @@Joe_1776 my room has no ventilation at all if I don't open a window and door so usually my room can get a little warm after my pc Being on is nice in winter but doesn't do much

    • @Derek2k
      @Derek2k Před 2 lety +2

      That’s not as clickbaity and therefore won’t be used

  • @105579E
    @105579E Před 2 lety +226

    Having an American displaying the temperature in celsius is so awesome!
    Another great vid, thanks :)

    • @Demon09-_-
      @Demon09-_- Před 2 lety +10

      I mainly use celsius days. the conversion between them gets pretty confusing at times since its (Cx9/5)+32=F. so you get funky stuff like -40c = -40f. I also wish we would have switched to the metric system... just moving decmials to go for distance and weights. vs the convulted distance and other mesaurements I had to grow up learning to remember how to convert them....

    • @Demon09-_-
      @Demon09-_- Před 2 lety +16

      @@cezarnebun9607 if this is a legit question its a measurement of tempature that is wildy used across the world other then america

    • @Demon09-_-
      @Demon09-_- Před 2 lety +21

      @@cezarnebun9607 I mean telling a joke off of one sentence online is a toss up.You never know about what someone might know. I wpuld not be surprised at all if someone didn't know what Celsius was, which is why I started the sentence the way I did.

    • @kayak118
      @kayak118 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Demon09-_- what's a joke? 🤣

    • @FlawlessSin11
      @FlawlessSin11 Před 2 lety +4

      well most of the time electronics are measured in C so it's actually easier to just use it after years of monitoring tech temps.

  • @KratosAurionPlays
    @KratosAurionPlays Před 2 lety +62

    I used to have a big issue with room heat in my old place 4 years ago. My PC was definitely the biggest reason for it but also that room getting morning/afternoon sun.

    • @brianfox340
      @brianfox340 Před 2 lety +3

      Blackout curtains will change your life in those situations

    • @KratosAurionPlays
      @KratosAurionPlays Před 2 lety +11

      @@brianfox340 Oh I had those but my room still got ridiculously hot lol

    • @gremlin7900
      @gremlin7900 Před rokem +1

      @@brianfox340 i got a new room walls and black out curtains but the window itself got up to 95 degrees so had to rethink that and covered the windows lol

  • @Dust76tr
    @Dust76tr Před 2 lety +605

    “How to keep your PC from heating up your room”
    Simple! Put the PC in a different room and run long cables. Now it heats up a different room and doesn’t matter how loud it is

    • @TJ.85
      @TJ.85 Před 2 lety +36

      This is a strategy I've always wanted to implement maybe one day when thunderbolt is more readily available and not so finnicky.
      I know linus did it with his house.
      I know you can run individual cables but the lengths of some Cables can be a problem for staying functional (like hdmi 2.1 over 15ft for example)

    • @corneliusnubston
      @corneliusnubston Před 2 lety +4

      @@TJ.85 you can boost that signal thought i have a hdmi signal booster un powered for my VR setup but i also can power the same booster if i want to run stupid length of hdmi

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 2 lety +3

      Ideally, the thing should be in the bathroom then...
      But basically I already have my PC heating up another room when playing VR stuff on my Quest with VD.

    • @becky6360
      @becky6360 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TJ.85 whats thunderbolt

    • @tortordenful
      @tortordenful Před 2 lety +6

      @@TJ.85 i did this in 04, just a hole in the wall, USB and DVI cables through
      the wall. you don't have to make it more complex than it has to be.

  • @Kelig
    @Kelig Před 2 lety +60

    I unironically heat my room with my PC. I haven't turned my room radiator on in at least 10 years.

  • @zevo9314
    @zevo9314 Před 2 lety +326

    i never thought i'd see the day when jay is talking about underclocking and air cooling. are we sure he's not been taken hostage?

    • @InfiniteBeingX
      @InfiniteBeingX Před 2 lety +4

      It's already a proven factor that it takes water cooling a lot longer time to heat up vs air cooler. The air cooler heats up faster will make your room hotter faster. Water cooling takes a lot longer to heat up so it will take a longer time to heat up your room. Another factor is that heaters are basically air cooler. It heats up the the metals and a fan blows the hot air out. If water cooling is better at producing heat, then for sure they will add water to a heater and have the fan blow out hot air to make it produce more heat faster. But they don't do that for a reason because now it will take a lot longer time for that heater to produce heat because it has to heat up the water plus the metal at the same time to start making heat.

    • @Jacksonflax
      @Jacksonflax Před 2 lety +30

      @@InfiniteBeingX I literally began having a stoke from even attempting to understand your logic. It takes a two and a half minutes for a 5900x and a 3080 to get two 360mm rads up to temp, How often are you only playing games for that long? It literally doesn't matter how you cool your PC... The components use a specific amount of power, and a specific amount of that power gets turned into heat. Only thing you can do to get it to put off less heat is to get it to use less power (underclocking and undervolting)

    • @aprilgeneric8027
      @aprilgeneric8027 Před 2 lety

      he's owned by the left, he cares about the enviornment more than he cares about productivity. it's the fairytopiaunicorn land where making a living doesn't matter, you can just be a bum on the beach to survive.

    • @sugareddrip1099
      @sugareddrip1099 Před 2 lety +2

      @@aprilgeneric8027 can’t tell if you’re joking or not and I lowkey like it

    • @Kudos_OG
      @Kudos_OG Před 2 lety

      @@InfiniteBeingX not sure how the heater in a car or reverse cycle air con works? 😂

  • @-rr-4172
    @-rr-4172 Před rokem +4

    This has got to be one of if not (and imo) the best channel on CZcams to learn about PC's HANDS DOWN! Awesome work, always with the most essential in depth amount of detail for anyone looking to learn more about their PC system. GREAT WORK!

  • @RandomActsOfReality
    @RandomActsOfReality Před 2 lety +177

    I’m in England - warming my room is a happy benefit for most of the year.
    As a younger person playing on a Commodore 64 back in the day, I’d use the power brick to keep my feet warm…

    • @adpsycho1
      @adpsycho1 Před 2 lety +4

      haha same here! those were the days.

    • @RBMDragon
      @RBMDragon Před 2 lety +2

      Summer here is winter in California.

    • @MyAirMyles
      @MyAirMyles Před 2 lety +2

      its been hell the last month or so with the heat wave.

    • @_unseenhunter_5093
      @_unseenhunter_5093 Před 2 lety

      @@RBMDragon no, they're both in the northern hemisphere so summer in uk is summer in California. It's only winter in southern hemisphere like Australia

    • @RBMDragon
      @RBMDragon Před 2 lety +1

      @@_unseenhunter_5093 Meant to clarify better: the summer temperatures are close to the winter temperatures in California.

  • @jeepmusic54
    @jeepmusic54 Před 2 lety +309

    I have actually been looking into this since last Wednesday after i installed an EVGA 3080Ti and realized I installed a furnace.

    • @RN-kl4kp
      @RN-kl4kp Před 2 lety +29

      1st world problem

    • @FaceyDuck
      @FaceyDuck Před 2 lety +20

      no, it’s a space heater

    • @Iggyboiii
      @Iggyboiii Před 2 lety +8

      @@Aciel_Yu he flexing fosho

    • @erichall090909
      @erichall090909 Před 2 lety +15

      No shit. Strix 3090 makes my room an oven

    • @agc2801
      @agc2801 Před 2 lety +13

      I’ll take that furnace problem away from you anytime.

  • @irakandjii2496
    @irakandjii2496 Před 2 lety +13

    Years ago my gaming room was a closet on the first floor of the house, typically the room would exceed 100 degrees F. I needed to get inventive, gaming in a sauna was not sustainable.
    My systems have always been fully water cooled (early adopter from the Koolance days). So, I drilled 2 one inch holes through the floor into the basement. Mounted a triple 360 radiator in the joists below the game room and mounted 3 120mm fans. Threaded the tubing and wiring from the PC to the radiator, I used some Koolance quick connects through the case.
    Bingo, I was back to a 70 degree work/play space.

  • @chadhowell1328
    @chadhowell1328 Před 2 lety +8

    If you don’t want to open the door you can always install a return air grill in the door or ABOVE the door (hot air rises) and that will help with return air quite a bit. You can also install a jumper duct for a return air duct if you don’t like the other suggestion but getting that hot air out has to happen in order for cold air to get back in and remove more heat. Search both of these returns on the tube and there are a few good ones out there.

  • @WhackyCast
    @WhackyCast Před 2 lety +540

    I've got the smallest game/work space and if I boot up VR, and record with the door closed my space gets above 35 degrees C within 20 minutes.

    • @Fuzzout
      @Fuzzout Před 2 lety +59

      I once tested this in my loft room; I closed the skylight and fired up cyberpunk (with a 3090 in my system); after 1 hour it was a sauna-like experience.

    • @LoLo-vh2hn
      @LoLo-vh2hn Před 2 lety +1

      Ah man

    • @JuusoHuttunenOfficial
      @JuusoHuttunenOfficial Před 2 lety +6

      Same. And it happens even when remote working, having desktop ON whole day. Thankfully dont have to keep door closed whole day, and it's getting finally colder here.

    • @tomppeli.
      @tomppeli. Před 2 lety +1

      That's an oof. I have a similar case, but with two people's gaming systems and a reluctant occupant for cooling

    • @pondopondo1497
      @pondopondo1497 Před 2 lety +7

      dude, if the room is small you could purchase a releativly cheap air conditioner. Its a god send device it could be around 400-500 USD with instalation.

  • @gureno19
    @gureno19 Před 2 lety +152

    To be honest, one of the greatest features of my rig is that is keeps my room at a nice temp during winter

    • @gizengar111
      @gizengar111 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah when I want to give my room some heat. I just turn on my triple sli gtx 480s and run benchmarks constantly.

    • @eQui253
      @eQui253 Před 2 lety +12

      ​@@gizengar111 yeah, who needs energy efficiency these days...

    • @patrickh92able
      @patrickh92able Před 2 lety

      only takes 1 FX9590 CPU overclocked and youll get a good 100+ degrees celcius

  • @DeilGrist
    @DeilGrist Před 2 lety +54

    I find that setting your house fan to be always on while you're gaming helps to increase air exchange when your air conditioner is not cycling, and also setting your menu frame rates lower to something like 30 FPS will drop your clocks and give time for the room to cool off between matches.

    • @firetraq
      @firetraq Před rokem +12

      Hey DeilGrist, i work for a mold company, dont do this, because your fan is always running without the AC on you are increase the moisture in your system, this in turn increases the chance of mold growth, what you'll end up having are moldy a/c coils and moldy AC ducts. Not good for your system and especially you.

    • @TheLegendOfLame
      @TheLegendOfLame Před rokem +1

      @@firetraq oh is this true? My HVAC worker uncle told me the best option was to keep the house fan always on to keep it cool. He didnt mention mold. That's an interesting point to keep in mind. I wonder what the alternative is then

    • @dot6924
      @dot6924 Před rokem +1

      @@TheLegendOfLame did a google search and traq is right

    • @nobbyfirefly57
      @nobbyfirefly57 Před 9 měsíci

      What do I do for a singleplayer game?

  • @stephenfellows8638
    @stephenfellows8638 Před 2 lety

    They say it is better giving rather than receiving!
    You three are awesome 👍🏻

  • @garbuckle3000
    @garbuckle3000 Před 2 lety +122

    Also keep in mind that your monitor(s) pump out heat as well. The larger the screen, the more heat it produces. Luckily the days of 300-400w plasmas are behind us

    • @soupwizard
      @soupwizard Před 2 lety +7

      Cries in dual 21" Sony CRTs

    • @ampm8210
      @ampm8210 Před 2 lety

      Got over in the back room. It's old relic

    • @crisnmaryfam7344
      @crisnmaryfam7344 Před 2 lety +2

      yeah some older monitors crank out some serious heat. Ive got an old HP 1080p 60hz that puts off about as much heat as my 3080.

    • @LordMoebius
      @LordMoebius Před 2 lety

      When I was younger and pretty broke I had a 50" Sony Bravia tv that kept me from freezing to death in the winter. I couldn't afford heat but that kept me warm enough to not die.

    • @Darkhalo314
      @Darkhalo314 Před 2 lety +3

      I just bought a new Sony A9G 4k OLED a few weeks ago and the first thing I noticed when I walked by my TV for the first time was the huge amount of heat it gave off. Even 2ft away you could feel it.

  • @stephendavis3710
    @stephendavis3710 Před 2 lety +418

    “ Assuming you got a game room” Jay- assuming I got a PC

    • @lordcodicus
      @lordcodicus Před 2 lety +6

      the game room is where the pc rests

    • @deenutt6964
      @deenutt6964 Před 2 lety +6

      @Dussy Pestroyer This funeral sure is saddening… let’s turn it into a game room! 🤗

    • @jakobe_bryantgaming5580
      @jakobe_bryantgaming5580 Před 2 lety +5

      My game room is also my bedroom, tv room, changing room, and living room

    • @exxor9108
      @exxor9108 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jakobe_bryantgaming5580 Story of my brother's life.

    • @rolandwalker8298
      @rolandwalker8298 Před 2 lety +2

      Gotta keep that 486DX cool some how my friend :P

  • @amnforge
    @amnforge Před 2 lety +15

    I always look forward to the winter. In Florida, it's like 1 day out of the whole year.

    • @marlonlyn2719
      @marlonlyn2719 Před 2 lety

      And it probably rains, and Power96 plays Choco-Mi Burrito (Power 96 Version)

    • @ixplicit
      @ixplicit Před 2 lety

      i went to florida in February and got the best tan of my life i can conclude florida does not know winter. im pretty sure it was only like 80-85 degrees too the sun just hits different down there haha

    • @isaintlikei4076
      @isaintlikei4076 Před 2 lety

      This further confirms Florida is just a tiny Australia

    • @uss-dh7909
      @uss-dh7909 Před 2 lety

      Come to North Dakota (upper midwest, just south of Canada), we have two seasons:
      Summer: June, July, August
      Nonsense: The rest of the year

  • @ellie_cr
    @ellie_cr Před 2 lety +17

    Living in AZ, we've done all of these tips. I have super old single pane windows so we've put aluminum to block out the outside heat and radiation on them. Next step is to find a small ac for our rooms so hopefully that helps. Ty for this video!

    • @Flaresidedark
      @Flaresidedark Před 2 lety

      Check and see if you area governments are offering rebates/interest free loans for new windows. Lots of places are just to reduce the power needed to cool. Windows and insulation are normally part of it.

  • @YOEL_44
    @YOEL_44 Před 2 lety +53

    PSUs also generate heat, specially if it's Gigabyte...

    • @sturm375
      @sturm375 Před 2 lety +2

      ROFL Bwhahahahahaha :p

    • @mikaeln887
      @mikaeln887 Před 2 lety +2

      All fun and games until that magic smoke comes out of the PSU...

    • @lazerpigeon
      @lazerpigeon Před 2 lety +2

      @@mikaeln887 I just returned my gigabyte psu after seeing that my psu was the exact same model that gamers nexus was talking about. Got a corsair rm 850 so I don't have to worry anymore

    • @Imkishore_12
      @Imkishore_12 Před 2 lety

      @@lazerpigeon good for you mate

    • @dillonvandergriff4124
      @dillonvandergriff4124 Před 2 lety +1

      It's not an explosion! It's just our new heat lowering feature! If you use your psu the thermal throttling feature kicks in, reducing long-term heat output by 100%!*
      *assuming your case is inflamable, results may vary

  • @dallin9731
    @dallin9731 Před 2 lety +374

    I see why Linus goes with Server Racks for his PCs, having the heat in a seperate room really helps.
    Same thing with whole room watercooling series they made a few years ago, it is always a good watch even if it is older and not really practical.

    • @TheMC1X
      @TheMC1X Před 2 lety +18

      He's also about removing the noise of a desktop computer by his side, but yeah, that's a good point too

    • @PolCmara
      @PolCmara Před 2 lety +2

      Actually i remember seeing a build where the watercooling components were on a different room and they wired a tube into the computer. It was something like.
      PC --- Wall outlets --- Different room --- Radiators and pump

    • @wolf1438
      @wolf1438 Před 2 lety +5

      It wasn't because of heat but because of noise, it was server rack PC with Blow-a-tron fans.

    • @Dracossaint
      @Dracossaint Před 2 lety

      @@PolCmara not from concentrate did that with a mini itx system. Heck if i remember the video tho

    • @SheepAmongG.O.A.T
      @SheepAmongG.O.A.T Před 2 lety

      cept during winter he's missing out on that extra heat.

  • @marslogics
    @marslogics Před 2 lety +35

    My room is 32c - 35c summer time, and using high cpu/gpu processing tasks heats it up even more. The advice given is spot on. Keep volts/clocks low in summer, and you can move it back up in winter time.

    • @enigmaartista2981
      @enigmaartista2981 Před rokem

      How do you do that?

    • @marslogics
      @marslogics Před rokem +2

      @@enigmaartista2981 In the bios, you can change voltage and core clock settings. see your motherboard manual and google for more details.

    • @cfwebdeveloper
      @cfwebdeveloper Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@enigmaartista2981 For my video card I use MSI Afterburner and just lower the Temp Limit to where my FPS is still great. This will auto adjust the power limit to the video card and put out less heat. I've tried setting FPS hard cap in games but it still makes the card work harder and by doing this I find it lowered my card temps.

  • @firstlast2241
    @firstlast2241 Před 2 lety +1

    Super appreciate the temp conversion to celsius

  • @Snowyscar
    @Snowyscar Před 2 lety +81

    Hey Jay, just want to say that I appreciate that you always mention heat in Celsius, either in text or saying it aloud. It really helps all non-Americans(I.e. rest of the world).

    • @quwarq
      @quwarq Před 2 lety +7

      Indeed.
      Didn't mind at all that the spoken 40 and written 38 were not the same, it was in the same ballpark, and it was getting the idea though, unlike 100 degrees which is for me boiling water XD
      Thanks for the video!

    • @SerratusAnterior
      @SerratusAnterior Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah because the world actually exsists outside the US

    • @EasytheGoon
      @EasytheGoon Před 2 lety +6

      Omfg Europeans are so pretentious all the fucking time.

    • @L39T
      @L39T Před 2 lety +2

      @@EasytheGoon no u

    • @Davidrupa
      @Davidrupa Před 2 lety +3

      Most Americans watching this use C anyways cause we are tech junkies. I doubt many people who don’t understand both watch these videos lol.

  • @SimonChristensen
    @SimonChristensen Před 2 lety +621

    Isn't the primary purpose of our gaming PCs to heat up our rooms? 🤔

    • @heatnup6899
      @heatnup6899 Před 2 lety +45

      I thought it was so that we could cook food without needing a microwave or an oven.

    • @fredwerza3478
      @fredwerza3478 Před 2 lety +27

      People who live in Siberia only game to have a warm room

    • @RichWhiteUM
      @RichWhiteUM Před 2 lety +5

      @@fredwerza3478 I was going to say Alaska. We could just say anywhere approaching the Arctic Circle.

    • @hotmojoe2483
      @hotmojoe2483 Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah I thought I bought a multipurpose space heater that just happens to do gaming stuff

    • @ghost-type
      @ghost-type Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, how am I supposed to stay warm in the winter?

  • @YankeeWraith
    @YankeeWraith Před 2 lety +1

    For people that are looking for air exchange without having the door wide open they do make door vents you can install if you're handy enough. We used these at my last job in network closets where the cooling wasn't adequate and upgrading it wasn't budget friendly.

  • @down2earth485
    @down2earth485 Před 2 lety +11

    haha I remember being like "wow my room is even HOTTER" when I watercooled my PC. With a radiator, my computer literally became a space heater

  • @user-ec6ej4dp6t
    @user-ec6ej4dp6t Před 2 lety +41

    I enjoy my PC heating up the room, makes me realize its power.

    • @Viemo_
      @Viemo_ Před 2 lety +5

      The more powerful the less heat it puts out because it needs to work less. Therefore being ice cool means the best pc 😎

    • @4thMUSKETEERS
      @4thMUSKETEERS Před 2 lety +3

      Tell that to my bios modded gtx 780 spitting out as much heat/power as a 3090

    • @Subzearo
      @Subzearo Před 2 lety

      It just means your PC is inefficient. Do you really enjoy wasting that much power for pretty images?

  • @skycubix8943
    @skycubix8943 Před 2 lety +286

    I love how Jay completely ignored the whole 6600XT announcement and cards, as if he couldn't care less lol

    • @agc2801
      @agc2801 Před 2 lety +14

      Respect ✊

    • @yeseldiaz3453
      @yeseldiaz3453 Před 2 lety +60

      Because no one does at this point lol

    • @JD_79
      @JD_79 Před 2 lety +70

      Because his videos covering new releases are the worst ratio'd and full of comments telling him he sucks because he got a review card. He addressed this weeks ago.

    • @jordantrujillo293
      @jordantrujillo293 Před 2 lety +18

      I haven’t cared since they released the 3060

    • @no_tread_
      @no_tread_ Před 2 lety +13

      We don't like going backwards in technology.

  • @thewirv
    @thewirv Před 2 lety

    this video is full of great advice, thx Jay!

  • @KobraTrading
    @KobraTrading Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks for this. Great advice. Looks like I'm just going to have to keep my door open and pop a window open as well. And I HAVE good AC. But this system with a 3090 makes my room up to 15 degrees hotter than the house. If I leave the door open it's still almost 10 degrees hotter. It's unbearable in the humid heat here.

  • @pandaphil
    @pandaphil Před 2 lety +112

    So will we be getting a "How to heat your room with your PC" video when Winter rolls around?

    • @Cryowatt
      @Cryowatt Před 2 lety +9

      Mine crypto instead of running a space heater. Sell the coins and you can offset the cost of heating.

    • @chadhowell1328
      @chadhowell1328 Před 2 lety +2

      Turn on your pc, max everything,and then game or mine.

    • @SIP100Ka
      @SIP100Ka Před 2 lety +1

      Yep

    • @dreathnor
      @dreathnor Před 2 lety +1

      Downgrade to an FX-8350, put it on water, watch as that puppy heats up the room just idling, lol.

    • @christianbaer2897
      @christianbaer2897 Před 2 lety +1

      That's easy. Mine Crypto or run something more useful like folding@home.

  • @Hunt2Win
    @Hunt2Win Před 2 lety +58

    Blowing air out the door helps alot I do that every time i know im gonna be gaming for a long period. Another tip i can suggest, reduce monitor brightness, get energy efficient light bulbs if you play with the lights on, or try play with lights off. I mean with the brightness of the monitor lower and in the dark should help adjust. Maybe if you play in the day in the summer, get reflective curtains. *Edit:Try to hydrate yourself, and try wear something make you feel cool, and help tolerate the heat. These are some small things you can do but they all add up.

    • @jetah50
      @jetah50 Před 2 lety +1

      i can feel a heat difference when my reflective curtains are open. even closed they're pretty warm but it's much cooler in the room.

    • @bluephreakr
      @bluephreakr Před 2 lety +3

      About monitors and lights, try to set it up so there is lighting _in the back._ While for some it may be distracting, ambient lighting is suppose to help reduce eyestrain by removing the contrast between your light-generating display monitor and the surrounding environment.

    • @Tokru86
      @Tokru86 Před 2 lety +2

      Who wears clothing while gaming anyway?

    • @kingarthur7250
      @kingarthur7250 Před 2 lety +1

      Led bulbs use next no electric...a led monitor also uses hardly anything...if you want to save money or temps...then undervolt you gpu...dont overclock...

    • @maestrosplinter92
      @maestrosplinter92 Před 2 lety +1

      The clothing comment is the same flawed argument as the cooler cpu/gpu tho. You generate heat regardless of if you are wearing a jacket or not. The jacket only prevents the heat from leaving your body and entering the room in the same way as having the pc case with the fans off for example.

  • @jGRite
    @jGRite Před 2 lety +15

    Pro tip: High pressure fan blowing air out of the room (or window). However if you're streaming then you might want to turn some sort of voice filtering software/hardware on.

    • @justind9233
      @justind9233 Před 2 lety

      Pro tip? u mean common sense?

    • @WorldXHero
      @WorldXHero Před rokem +1

      Doesn’t work if its hot outside. You would just be increasing the temperature in the house overall

    • @FantasticKruH
      @FantasticKruH Před 8 měsíci

      Does not work when its 40c outside with 90% humidty.

  • @pegasusIndustries
    @pegasusIndustries Před 2 lety +4

    Interesting thought. I've been working on centralizing my gaming and workstations with my server set down in the cold basement and then running display and other cables through the flooring to my home office and other rooms. Keep all the heat in the basement however because of the cool concrete and constant cool in the summer time it wont be getting hardly warm at all down there. Been running a few R820's hand full of vm's, a Plex server, and a remote gaming system, plus a projector and separate gaming/theater system in there. So far its holder somewhat cool temps. So been thinking of placing a few systems like my wife and my own gaming/workstations down there to put it further to the test. Plus it would make it much quieter in the rooms we would have the peripherals and displays in. Catch is got to find longer cables, lol

  • @jimmymcgreason
    @jimmymcgreason Před 2 lety +23

    The temperature in my room is TOO DAMN HOT!
    Thanks, Jay. Always good to see you.

  • @Crusader1815
    @Crusader1815 Před 2 lety +102

    "Your hard drives and SSDs also put out a small amount of heat." Back in the day, around 1998, hard drives put out more than a "small amount" of heat. 9GB was a huge hard drive then, and I got a 10,000 RPM IBM drive, a HALF HEIGHT (yes, an inch and a half tall) monster chunk of steel that was super heavy, super loud, and ran so hot I had to fabricate a heat sink for it, run it outside the case, and attach a fan to the heat sink... what a pain.

    • @Cypeq
      @Cypeq Před 2 lety +5

      @@SkeleTonHammer not really when playing or installing games... they'll do just fine, might overheat if you keep running crystaldisk xD

    • @lesliesavage9229
      @lesliesavage9229 Před 2 lety +2

      Do you remember the "Big Foot" hard drives?

    • @CantankerousDave
      @CantankerousDave Před 2 lety +2

      @@lesliesavage9229 Made by Quantum, yep. But it was Micropolis’ 9GB AV-rated drives that ran so hot they died after a year.

    • @STORMFIRE07
      @STORMFIRE07 Před 2 lety +3

      @@SkeleTonHammer
      Btw it’s also better for the ssd if it is at a warmer temperature (not to the point it starts overheating) than a colder temperature because it increases it’s longevity

    • @less5406
      @less5406 Před 2 lety +2

      My first 1 Gigabyte drive was a SCSI WD full-height 5" drive. It was loud and hot but hella fast for the time. I think I may still have it somewhere...

  • @doc2472
    @doc2472 Před 2 lety

    Indeed. Thanks for this! Super helpful!

  • @ryanmichaelhaley
    @ryanmichaelhaley Před 2 lety

    My game room is a 7x5 walk in closet. My PC exhaust is vented up to an elevated position, with a fan on both ends. That top fan points to another desktop fan that is mounted to a shelf right in front of an aftermarket installed register I put in (effectively acting as an exhaust fan). This works pretty well for pulling heat out of the closet.

  • @lamboronald489
    @lamboronald489 Před 2 lety +168

    A little disclaimer for the people trying undervolt for the first time: the undervolt might be stable while playing rasterized games but your card will probably crash while playing with raytracing on. So It is useful to have two profiles: one with a more aggressive undervolt profile for when you are not playing with RT on and another one that will probably run around stock voltage that is gonna be stable with RT games.

    • @iCore7Gaming
      @iCore7Gaming Před 2 lety +5

      Eh ray tracing is kinda pointless still. Normal graphics are almost on par with ray tracing in games with already good graphics. Games like minecraft though it really shows.

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 2 lety +19

      @@iCore7Gaming Raytracing is same as any other technology - in the hands of people with no clue it is not useful, but even the performance of the RTX 2060 is more than enough to give you full global-illuminaiton at a fraction of the performance-impact traditional lighting method would have.
      Sadly - that is an application that does not lend it self to the "uh, it's shiny" marketing and is thus hardly ever pursued.

    • @billbob7032
      @billbob7032 Před 2 lety +1

      I had a fantastic undervolt that worked at any game settings, but as soon as I tried streaming using the nvenc encoder games started crashing. I’m back to stock now

    • @TrapHouseZombie
      @TrapHouseZombie Před 2 lety +1

      @@ABaumstumpf eh I have to disagree. Raytracing gives no real benefit to using it over how much fps you lose while it’s on.

    • @rtxchimkin
      @rtxchimkin Před 2 lety

      I run an undervolted 3080ti most of the time with Ray tracing and everything on and I have yet to crash

  • @benjisan042
    @benjisan042 Před 2 lety +11

    Thanks for making this video Jay! I use to struggle with this problem at my old place. My room was always the hottest in the house with minimal ventilation. All I had to do was turn the fan around. New game setup is in the basement and is naturally cool. Still had to watch this whole video because my past self needed to hear this! Cheers!

  • @592Johno
    @592Johno Před 2 lety +1

    Oh my god, this video hits the nail on the head. I live in the Caribbean and it gets pretty toasty and since most Caribbean countries are developing countries not everyone can't afford AC everywhere. My room is located on the other side of house where whenever it's after 1-3pm the sun just goes ham and absolutely blasts my room. Concrete tends to trap heat and you can literally feel the difference in temperature when you leave or enter my room. I find my self gaming at nights with my curtains pulled, windows open, door open and a fan running. My room gets up to 32 °C as well, it just sucks.

  • @dreadfullradu4726
    @dreadfullradu4726 Před 2 lety

    Everything you said here is very accurate, Well said!!

  • @BrianMedeiros
    @BrianMedeiros Před 2 lety +103

    I love this kind of video. Things that are so common. scenes, you're probably overlooking it. Simple things to improve quality of life, and when you need to bite the bullet and buy an upgrade.
    Love to see more videos like this about gaming spaces and taking things for granted. How to properly set up your monitor. Room lighting. Clean a mouse ball. Furniture. Pet vs PC.

    • @sebasimp
      @sebasimp Před 2 lety +14

      clean a mouse ball? in 2021? those 3 people will love to be referenced in a video

    • @petitpanierdosier3206
      @petitpanierdosier3206 Před 2 lety +3

      That's the opposite to me, these pieces of "advice" should be common sense and people not knowing about how heat works is just baffling.

  • @fredV35
    @fredV35 Před 2 lety +35

    On behalf on the entire world except the US, thank you for converting temperatures to degrees Celsius!

    • @L39T
      @L39T Před 2 lety

      You’re welcome

    • @svingarm9283
      @svingarm9283 Před 2 lety

      Just usa who is behind everyone else.
      They are not so wise over there, celcius ftw

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Před 2 lety +1

      @@svingarm9283 Liberia and Myanmar also use Fahrenheit, so it isn't just the US.

    • @brunofagulha
      @brunofagulha Před 2 lety

      @@wta1518 also imperial units/system?

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Před 2 lety +1

      @@brunofagulha Yes.

  • @Badsniperarmy
    @Badsniperarmy Před 2 lety

    Thank u sir. I’ve needed this

  • @nukfauxsho
    @nukfauxsho Před 2 lety +13

    For those who are weary about window units, use a standalone A/C unit that exhausts using a hose & adapter through the window. Its not as efficient as a window unit, but way more convenient for climate control such as using as a fan, dehumidifier, and my unit gets down to 61F output. I use it as a supplement when i work in my home office to my game room (as it rolls around on wheels). I would strongly advise against swamp coolers.

    • @codesymphony
      @codesymphony Před 7 měsíci

      just make sure it has 2 hoses. single hose doesn't actually cool anything since it creates a pressure imbalance causing warm air to just seep back into the room

    • @lilkngstr
      @lilkngstr Před dnem

      ​@codesymphony what does the 2nd hose do? I had one that only had 1 hose exhaust years ago in a condo when the main unit was dying. Makes sense. In our case I think it worked out since it pulled it much cooler air from the common hallway.

  • @Chris-zj2cd
    @Chris-zj2cd Před 2 lety +27

    “here in california we have HVAC”
    a san diegan, who uses a table fan: 🙂

  • @mikeockler7121
    @mikeockler7121 Před 2 lety +71

    I've got my computer set up in the same room that my HVAC pulls air from in the basement 🤘😎🤘 keeping it reeeeeal chilly and automatically exchanging the air for me lol I didn't realize how lucky the setup was until watching this video. Thanks Jay!

    • @Exrimordonaj
      @Exrimordonaj Před 2 lety +3

      Same, it gets so cold I actually run a heater while gaming mid summer. Lol

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety +3

      HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Exrimordonaj HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

    • @haydn6462
      @haydn6462 Před 2 lety +1

      @@shredderorokusaki3013 That's pretty scary hot for a gpu, you should really invest in an airflow case with beefy noctua fans or an aio. As well as get some ac pumping in there, wouldn't want to fry the vram on a new gpu when you get it. If a gt970 is getting that hot, you will likely fry a 3080ti in the same environment

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      @@haydn6462 i got this case in 2017 until then i had a 2006 case that kept it from 2006 until 2017 so gtx 970 worked for 2 years on the 11 years old case well and from 2017 until now it is on this case. I will also remove the two hdds when i get the card because i stopped using them since i got the mp 600 2tb ssd in juyly 2020.

  • @MrChriselicious
    @MrChriselicious Před 2 lety +1

    I usually undervolt in the summer and overclock in the winter. Makes a Hugh difference. Also mining during the winter. So I can make some money and still getting that heat!

  • @john-paultolczyk2434
    @john-paultolczyk2434 Před 2 lety

    wow you are amazing jayson you know so much about this this stuff. i live perth wa so temperatures are between for min 3 to 22 in c and max 13 to 42 c

  • @GRWiley
    @GRWiley Před 2 lety +65

    Changing to "Adaptive" in the GPU control panel seems like it made a couple of degree difference! Great tip!

    • @billnien997
      @billnien997 Před 2 lety

      what did you change to adaptive? also NVidia control panel?

    • @hawkshot1025
      @hawkshot1025 Před 2 lety +1

      @@billnien997 Probably power management mode in the nvidia control panel.

    • @billnien997
      @billnien997 Před 2 lety +2

      @@hawkshot1025 I guess my gpu doesn't support changing to adaptive, I just see normal and maximum performance.
      Which is a shame, my card gets really hot I could use an easy temp decrease.

    • @guard961
      @guard961 Před 2 lety

      hope this works.. im using a 1080ti founders edition and these blower cards run super hot all the time!

    • @HAXZingTERR0R
      @HAXZingTERR0R Před 2 lety

      @@billnien997 it's adaptive vsync

  • @prodigygaming802
    @prodigygaming802 Před 2 lety +9

    Wow what perfect timing this just started happening a weeks ago ever since I brought my pc to my room from having it in the basement for years.

  • @jeremylindemann5117
    @jeremylindemann5117 Před 2 lety +8

    I've briefly looked into the possibility of exhausting the air from the rad outside the house somehow so that the room temperature isn't affected. It's possible but problematic.
    Basically I'd need to put an air box over the rad which would feed into a pipe with at least one fan helping to deal with the extra pressure. I'd need to vent into a space that isn't affected by wind pressure changes outside, the roof space is ideal.
    I want to do it but I've been too lazy to get started.

    • @corvidconfidential8826
      @corvidconfidential8826 Před 2 lety

      You ever try this? What you described is the same system that's used by portable ACs (not the shitty desktop ones, real ones that look like giant paper shredders)

    • @ceementality
      @ceementality Před rokem

      Ever try this?

  • @CyberGamingStudiosOfficial

    i keep my fans on the standard mode but id listen to your advice thanks

  • @jsteve8139
    @jsteve8139 Před 2 lety +7

    Dude, skunkworks! I’ve been watching you since you had a “full-time job” and a full-time CZcams channel. You inspired me with skunkworks to become a builder. So, love me some skunkworks and that you brought it back.

  • @Special_Sharpie
    @Special_Sharpie Před 2 lety +7

    I live in Southern Alberta. I simultaneously live in a hot and cold place. -40 in the winter, +40 in the summer

    • @hquest
      @hquest Před 2 lety

      *Nebraska feelings kicks in*

  • @-EndlessNameless-
    @-EndlessNameless- Před 2 lety +3

    I live in the north of England, so this video basically advised how to cool down my room for that one month out of the whole year.

    • @SirAdamKenna
      @SirAdamKenna Před 2 lety +1

      Durham here, we are lucky to get a week of hot weather.

    • @-EndlessNameless-
      @-EndlessNameless- Před 2 lety

      @@SirAdamKenna Darlington/county Durham here, so I was exaggerating when I said a month lol

  • @Flaresidedark
    @Flaresidedark Před 2 lety

    If you are in newer construction homes that have the required vent above the door. Most 220mm case fans will fit and you can set up an exhaust fan that is efficient and quiet compared to the standard house exhaust fan.

  • @davidnott_
    @davidnott_ Před 2 lety +47

    Having recently converted my shed into a gaming room, my main concern was the cold. I insulated the walls and ceilings with 100mm of Polystyrene but I had no idea how hot it would get in there with a 5600x/3070 system. The room is 2x2m and completely sealed. It can easily get up to 30c+ in there with the door shut. In the end, I got a couple of in-line extractor fans, put them in the garage (with joins onto the gaming shed) and bored through the walls. One in, one out. After a week, for the "out" fan, I ran ducting across the ceiling to above my gaming pc, which seems to have helped even more. Thanks to the insulation I put in, in our latest heat wave in the UK, the shed would be 20c when it was 30c outside, however, putting on the fans ended up heating the shed due to the "in" fan, filling it with 30c air. But in normal times, it works well for now.

    • @hybrid9mm
      @hybrid9mm Před 2 lety +10

      A few tweaks will get it working well. Ideally you want the inlet to be as low as possible from a shaded area outside, the outlet should go to atmosphere.
      You could easily route the outlet through the garage wall, this will stop you circulating the warm air, your inlet will need a little more thought to suit your property.
      Hope that gives you a few ideas to improve 👍 I’m a plumber now but I used to do ducting and A/C installation.

    • @Moon___man
      @Moon___man Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah insulation can become a double edged sword real quick. Where I live is warm pretty much most of the year, everyone learns their lesson trying to save money by turning off the AC when not home lol.. It takes so much to cool your house back down. Its better to just maintain it.

    • @Fab710
      @Fab710 Před 2 lety +1

      Look into making a "swamp cooler" and duct that air into the inlet side.

  • @TheGigaMan
    @TheGigaMan Před 2 lety +17

    It's almost as if Jay is spying on us... 🤣
    My wife was literally saying it's hot in my room every day she walked in the office.

  • @roberttompkins89
    @roberttompkins89 Před 2 lety +2

    In refridgeration I always describe it in terms of heat and lack of heat. Cold is a relative term whereas heat is actually referring to vibration of particles. I dont cool things I remove heat.

  • @TYahn91942
    @TYahn91942 Před 6 měsíci

    You explained that perfectly.

  • @HanKamiBeats
    @HanKamiBeats Před 2 lety +40

    This really helps, I live in Iceland and even though that in the winter it sometimes touches -20 c° (-4° Fahrenheit) my 2070 super, Ryzen 7 5800x system absolutely boils my brain if I even dare to close the door. love your content Jay❤️ Been a huge fan for a long time :)

    • @trippybruh1592
      @trippybruh1592 Před 2 lety +1

      You get a like for converting Celsius to American.

    • @aqqaluolsvig1564
      @aqqaluolsvig1564 Před 2 lety

      I live in greenland and it does indeed make your room more damp when gaming.

    • @Skrenja
      @Skrenja Před 2 lety

      I thought Iceland actually got cold. -20°C is nothing. Here in Alberta it sometimes gets to -50°C.

    • @rubenschilling
      @rubenschilling Před 2 lety +5

      @@CVX_Freak lmao that was the joke

    • @cito478
      @cito478 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CVX_Freak what other countries use Fahrenheit? I know Canada and Mexico both don't 🤣

  • @imboredidid1
    @imboredidid1 Před 2 lety +44

    To add to what Jay already said, I always thought to treat my AC-less room like a bigger PC case. I need air intake (window with fan blowing in), heat exhaust (2nd window and door with fans blowing out), and air circulation around the hottest components (desk/PC area).

    • @stuartfury3390
      @stuartfury3390 Před 2 lety +19

      From someone who lives in a hot country, keep your windows closed and curtains drawn during hot sunny days. Opening windows will just make things worse.

    • @pjavilla
      @pjavilla Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, I have a push/pull fan config for my rooms. Better than just maxing out your ceiling fan (which just stirs the air around in your room).

    • @crisnmaryfam7344
      @crisnmaryfam7344 Před 2 lety +1

      @@stuartfury3390 Absolutely and covering the windows to block the sun (more so than curtains) helps a ton too. Can get a bit hermit/recluse like after a bit though...

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      @@crisnmaryfam7344 HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

  • @Dsrgreyy
    @Dsrgreyy Před 2 lety

    Omg I needed this!

  • @durzogaming8909
    @durzogaming8909 Před 2 lety

    There are also vent boosters that are inexpensive it’s not the most effective way but does help. Especially if you open the door

  • @someguythatwasmorbed8251
    @someguythatwasmorbed8251 Před 2 lety +38

    I'd like to say that putting a block-out pleated blind on the windows also helps so that it blocks sun (assuming people don't have roller blinds on their windows). IKEA sells one of those for cheap and it's called "SCHOTTIS" and it does reduce the temp slightly in my room.

    • @andromydous
      @andromydous Před 2 lety +5

      We have blackout curtains on damn near every window. They do help considerably. I know this, because my wife will sometimes tie one of them back and I have to fuss at her. With that particular window facing west and the neighbor's house, from about 11 am till sundown, we are either getting heat indirectly from reflecting off our neighbor's siding, or directly from the sun. So, the living room heats up faster with the curtain pulled back than it would if it was kept down during the day.

    • @easley421
      @easley421 Před 2 lety +3

      THIS.....combined with a $400 (US) LG 12,000 BTu Air Conditioner keeps my VR sim racing game room 65°F in the Arizona 100°F sun. If you're gonna spend all that cash on PC components (especially now) might as well spend the money on proper AC.

    • @thelazyduck9370
      @thelazyduck9370 Před 2 lety

      It’s tough in the evening though, if you have open windows way too many bugs get in

    • @A6Legit
      @A6Legit Před 2 lety

      Any blind is better than nothing.
      A quick search says "perfect fit" blinds are the best. Also wood slat blinds, but run of the mill venetian blinds are good as well.
      If you have blinds, the bigger issue may be your window panels ability to insulate heat from outside.

    • @A6Legit
      @A6Legit Před 2 lety +1

      @@easley421 Now thats smart cooling lol. Forget all the fancy PC parts 😝
      - did a search, I think you meant 12,000 btu

  • @vampirecount3880
    @vampirecount3880 Před 2 lety +53

    Since i live in a pretty cold place, heating my room is a nice bonus my PC gives me lol
    Its a great heater.

    • @GainingDespair
      @GainingDespair Před 2 lety +2

      This for sure, when I was in North Dakota I could just crack my window and instantly comfortable during winter.
      This region doesn't really have winter.

    • @honcho5313
      @honcho5313 Před 2 lety +1

      Lucky :(

    • @Hooligan16
      @Hooligan16 Před 2 lety

      @@GainingDespair crazy i live in north dakota and you are 1000% correct haha

    • @martinpalmer6203
      @martinpalmer6203 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah im in the Philippines so...my water loop gets to 80C over time, like a day of running something that uses 100% GPU and ~180 watts showing in wattman, its 30C here almost all the time and 80% humidity... the extra heat from the system doesnt help the comfort levels in the room :)

    • @WyattOShea
      @WyattOShea Před 2 lety

      I wish I lived in a cool place :(. Here (Australia) and in a room which doesn't get really any airflow with the window fully open because of a dumb house design my room is always hot....

  • @Alexsass1
    @Alexsass1 Před 2 lety +1

    These are a lot of great tips, I never thought of lowering voltage, but what I do is I have a small box fan behind my monitors and pc, and then I have a ceiling fan about 4 feet behind me and a shop fan (the cube yellow ones) on the floor blowing air past my feet and into the wall, the perfect amount of circulation where it gets warm but never grossly hot (Where I live it hasn't dropped below 85 in the last 2.5 weeks and I live like 1.5 miles from the ocean so its constant 100% humidity) with the ac going in my house (the living room doesn't go below 79 when its set to 72 from 10am-10pm, garbage ac unit.... sadly I rent) door shut in the game room it gets up to 80 if I take a 5 minute break every 2 hours or so to go get a drink or use the bathroom and leave the door open if I don't get up for like 6 hours it'll get up to 82 which is still only a 3 degree increase vs the living room with all those doors open, the moral of the story is make your area have as much circulation as possible and blow it across your monitors (because they get hot and generate heat too) and blow the hot air that sits around your pc away, circulate, circulate, circulate ps I am running a Ryzen 5 3600x with a 2080 super (i got for stupid cheap from a friend who was upgrading to a 30 series) cooler master mwe modular 750w psu all air cooled in a cooler master td500 case

  • @oceanbytez847
    @oceanbytez847 Před 2 lety

    back when i had a smaller room i do remember my PC making me sweat pretty bad in the summers and doubling as a very comfy foot warmer in the winters with a little change of direction. That being said now in my new home my setup is in the living room which is decently large and resists the worst of the heating effects.

  • @epicwolf
    @epicwolf Před 2 lety +26

    My wife and I just bought a three bedroom house. We decided the second bedroom is a guest room just in case a relative decided to come visit us from out of town but had a hard time deciding what the third room is for. I wanted a game room but my wife wanted a sauna. So we compromised and it worked out just fine. My PC generate enough heat in that room to make my wife happy.

    • @Dekipoo
      @Dekipoo Před 2 lety

      😂👏🏽

    • @agc2801
      @agc2801 Před 2 lety

      Get a jacuzzi too…perfect game room.

    • @mikeockler7121
      @mikeockler7121 Před 2 lety +4

      @@agc2801 jacuzzi water in a custom loop....genius

  • @ReksratYTB
    @ReksratYTB Před 2 lety +10

    Ventilation is a big one for me. I realized that if i leave my door open that completely fixes my issues with heating up my room or high GPU temps.

    • @patrickh92able
      @patrickh92able Před 2 lety +1

      at that point youre just slowly heating up the entire house lol

    • @user-nl8cc4ti8t
      @user-nl8cc4ti8t Před 2 lety

      @@patrickh92able Its a funny comment, but it doesnt work like that.

    • @TheBanjoShowOfficial
      @TheBanjoShowOfficial Před 2 lety +1

      @@patrickh92able Yeah unless the rest of your house is smaller than your room, which makes zero sense, then you will not notice that affect occur at all. Your A/C in your house, if you have a central heating system, will far output the relatively small amount of heat generated by your computer, I'd imagine.

  • @tkpenalty
    @tkpenalty Před 2 lety

    Watercooling is great at making my pc a heater for this winter down under!

  • @ryanspencer6778
    @ryanspencer6778 Před 2 lety

    I have an afterburner profile that has the power slider turned most of the way down. That keeps power consumption low and therefore less heat output. I also run an air conditioner to help keep the CPU and GPU as cool as possible. Has the added bonus of making things nice and cool even with the computer at full load.

  • @svingarm9283
    @svingarm9283 Před 2 lety +4

    You can look at it in such a way that the room is in a way a cabinet, and your PC is a piece of hardware in it.
    So of course there must also be airflow in the room

  • @satisfactoryinc9280
    @satisfactoryinc9280 Před 2 lety +8

    Jay I’m impressed on your hvac knowledge, I get plenty of customers complaining the ac isnt cooling well in some rooms. I go in there and there’s a 50” tv a pc, monitor and a console going at once with the door closed😂🤦‍♂️ 🥵

    • @4thMUSKETEERS
      @4thMUSKETEERS Před 2 lety

      My plasma literally heats my entire living room 🤣

  • @brandonroebuck504
    @brandonroebuck504 Před rokem

    if youre in an upstairs or older house then some of those register boosters can help pump some more air from your hvac into the room as well
    ive caved and simply bought one of those midea u window ac units to hlep keep the room cooler since i use a pc for most of the day every day, thats also an option

  • @professorr4ge
    @professorr4ge Před rokem +1

    i live in upstate ny, the heat from my pc isnt pleasant in the summer but its really nice during the winter months, i just run my air conditioner in my room to keep it cool in there

  • @Wufnu
    @Wufnu Před 2 lety +19

    All correct! Except the direction of door fan blowing air into/out of the room. Heat may flow from hot to cold but colder air is denser (e.g. see how cold/warm fronts move) and heat rises. The different densities means by just opening the door hotter air will flow out of the room near the top of the door and colder air will flow into the room near the bottom of the door; fan placement should aid this natural air movement instead of fight against it, e.g. fans on the floor blow in and fans hung at top of door frame blow out. By doing so, you more quickly and efficiently replace the hotter air in the room with colder air (i.e. increase ventilation).

    • @gamechanger2324
      @gamechanger2324 Před 2 lety

      If things get that bad everyone's going to start hooking up dryer exhausts from their PC to their window.....then you can open that door without tainting the rest of your house with that Heat Wave!

  • @oberonoberon9288
    @oberonoberon9288 Před 2 lety +11

    1) Automatic blinds: Reduce heat coming in from the outside.
    Popper HVAC are hard to install here due to building regulatins. (Standalone with exthaut hose, are a problem with my heating.)
    2) If you life in a region with Brick houses, they can store a (relatively) big amount of heat.
    So if you reduce the heat coming in during the day, letting night air in can keep you comfortable,
    provided you let the air circulate trou the house.
    PS: And if you in a low level city building in a region where breakins have happened,
    the correct blinds can keep people out while still allowing a (small) amount of air in.

    • @Trigger.444
      @Trigger.444 Před 2 lety +1

      The standalone portable AC is what I have in my PC room, here's a tip: make sure the connection point of the exhaust hose to the back of the unit is sealed up with some duck tape. I finally realized the hose > bracket > back of unit connection was pretty ill fitting; it's just plastic that snaps together without a seal, and was venting a ton of hot air back into the room, also losing pressure for exhausting that hot air outside. A little duck tape solved that.
      Also, get a cheap survival blanket, the thin foil looking ones, at your local sporting goods dept, for a couple bucks. Wrap that around the exhaust hose and tape it in place. Doesn't need to be perfectly tight either. That mitigates the heat that would still otherwise radiate back into the room just from the hose. On a hot summer day, close to 100F, using an infrared thermometer, the hose outer surface was 115-120+F, but after wrapping it, it temped at ambient or slightly above - like 35-40 degrees cooler. I thought of that little hack earlier this summer after taping up the hose connection. Wrapping the hose made a significant improvement on top of that, to keeping the room much cooler.

  • @MrMarinus18
    @MrMarinus18 Před 2 lety +1

    3:10
    Maybe there will be coolers with very large evaporation chambers. That way they can cool components to below room temperature just like a fridge.

  • @gamist8166
    @gamist8166 Před 2 lety +2

    I just upgraded from the x99 platform with the 5820k to the new Ryzen 5 5600x and let me tell you, the performance isn't too too different honestly, but the heat is night and day in a small-ish room for sure.

  • @aRell504
    @aRell504 Před 2 lety +18

    Bro I gotta have my fan and a/c running at all times😂

    • @bepbep7418
      @bepbep7418 Před 2 lety +1

      Central Air + 12,000 BTU window unit + 20" fan....

    • @Jayplaysdrums_
      @Jayplaysdrums_ Před 2 lety

      Yep, same. Got a little window unit plus central air and a fan in the room

  • @megatryn
    @megatryn Před 2 lety +3

    Also: Remember a human sitting and working/gaming at a desk produces around 100 Watt of heat. If you do something active, like VR, a person can quickly produce a lot more than that.

  • @soshiryuu8592
    @soshiryuu8592 Před 2 lety

    You can also make a cheap homemade ac unit using ice. A foam cooler, a fan or 2 (maybe some old case fans), with a water salt and ice mixture in the cooler. You will get a several degree difference it may only be maybe 5-10 degrees, but every bit helps.

  • @coorbin
    @coorbin Před 2 lety +29

    Other tips... If you have central A/C, putting other heat emitters, like routers and wifi access points, in another room, can help make your room run cooler. Each room has its own HVAC register, so if you spread your equipment out as much as you can, it will be easier for the central A/C to deal with it. That's especially useful if you have one room that's cool and one room that's hot.

  • @cybermantis
    @cybermantis Před 2 lety +33

    Whenever my gameroom gets hot af, I simply quit gaming and go to the nearby lake xD

    • @thereddog223
      @thereddog223 Před 2 lety +2

      Ac

    • @broklond
      @broklond Před 2 lety +1

      at least it forces you to live a more balanced lifestyle :D

  • @smoketinytom
    @smoketinytom Před 2 lety +3

    Game Room.... What, a room just to use your PC in?
    Such a nice thought.

    • @JasonEspin
      @JasonEspin Před 2 lety

      In the UK we call it an at home office!

  • @buck0607
    @buck0607 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for the video, I have one of the higher end PC's where I spent 5k on recent parts. The HEAT it produces is no joke. I highly encourage having a highly ventilated space for heat because it will kill components (for me my CPU) if running at sustained high temps.

  • @Christrrs
    @Christrrs Před 2 lety

    I LOVE YOURE CHANEL ONE OF THE MAIN RESONS IS BECAUSE YOU DONT INSERT POLICS ON PEOPLE YOU TALK ABOUT WHAT YOU LOVE TO DO AND YOU GIVE GREAT ADVICE IN MY OPINION YOUR FUNNY GOOD FAMILY MAN AND I LOVE THAT ABOUT YOU AND YOU HAVE GOOD FRIENDS THAT WORK WITH YOU .I STOPED WATCHING SOME OTHER CZcamsRS BECAUSE THEY THINK THEY ARE DOCTORS AND THEY PUT THEIR POLITICS ON THEIR VIEWERS THATS NOT WHY I WHATCH THEM IT WAS FOR THEIR CREATIVE IDEAS THANK YOU FOR NOT BEEN THAT GUY I RESPECT YOU AND YOU ARE ONE OF THE FEW KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK YOU DO

  • @Joeyzoom
    @Joeyzoom Před 2 lety +14

    How to keep your room from HEATING UP?
    Jay:"Shut your computer off."
    Fin

    • @sweatfitness12
      @sweatfitness12 Před 2 lety

      This is literally what my dad tells me every day and that’s my name 🤔

    • @t.c.b4722
      @t.c.b4722 Před 2 lety

      Kinda hard to game when your PC is off.

  • @HtcRawr
    @HtcRawr Před 2 lety +18

    I live in the desert of southern california, I have done all of the things you have said (besides reducing my overlock, because ive never actually done that because i dont fully understand how to do it safely). But the fan in the doorway works and so does buying a little window/portable ac unit. It gets to +120F where i live so my room gets pretty hot consistantly but i just open the door and put the fan there or ill turn on the little ac if i want to open the window and let the hot air in also.

    • @N8riz
      @N8riz Před 2 lety +1

      I have a portable swamp cooler, and having a window cracked works best for exhaust. and having positive pressure using 2 sheets of toilet paper. czcams.com/video/QMXBGYHiGes/video.html

    • @Spazbo4
      @Spazbo4 Před 2 lety

      One thing that has helped me with my room getting hot is getting a gpu with a liquid aio cooler and air cooling my cpu with a noctua cooler

    • @fredwerza3478
      @fredwerza3478 Před 2 lety +1

      Try looking into getting a mini-split AC unit --- they can cool your room to nice temp and also be very minimal on noise --- they are pricier than window units but well worth it

    • @TJ.85
      @TJ.85 Před 2 lety

      @@Spazbo4 that LITERALLY doesn't help with room temp.
      Jay explained that in the video it helps your components run cooler but the same heat is pumped into the rad's and into your room so the room temp will actually get hot faster with any type of water cooling including aio's.

    • @Spazbo4
      @Spazbo4 Před 2 lety

      @@TJ.85 except the opposite happens when i swapped my gpu for one that has an aio. i can't explain why it happens but it helped my room to be 10F-15F degrees cooler in my room. it does get a little warmer when i have games running with vsync off, by about 5 degrees, but still much more bearable than when i had my rtx 3090FE in my main PC

  • @packman67ny
    @packman67ny Před 2 lety

    waiting for this since 2014! thx

  • @TheCobraReport
    @TheCobraReport Před 2 lety

    I have been using a pedestal fan blowing out of my office all summer and yeah it makes a huge difference

  • @rishipranavramakrishnan689
    @rishipranavramakrishnan689 Před 2 lety +13

    Here is a solution. Exhaust your case air directly outside of the room with an outdoor exhaust radiator, if you have a custom loop. Or use it for cooking!!!

    • @joshhardin666
      @joshhardin666 Před 2 lety

      I had this idea as well, however, if you go to far from your ambient temperture in the room, you can either get condensation if you go too cold outside or put heat INTO your loop if it's too warm outside. - one thing I HAVE thought about though is maybe plumbing a radiator onto the intake of my window air conditioner so that hot air is immediately exchanged through the air conditioner to the outside. Somehow, I don't think that's going to get spousal approval though heh. All I know is that right now my window air conditioner unit, in it's current configuration is NOT enough to exhaust the heat from my water cooled 3090 and 5950x and it often gets into the mid 80's (f) (I have a thermometer in the wall for my room). at the same time, my loop temp gets into the 40-43c range (which I honestly fear for the structural integrity of my PETG tubes). I'm really not sure what to do. I can't use an air conditioner over 500w because my system at peak takes up 1100w. (measured at the ups, includes displays and networking gear) and I don't want to pop my 15a breaker.) - I rent my place and can't make any electrical or permanent hvac upgrades)

    • @rishipranavramakrishnan689
      @rishipranavramakrishnan689 Před 2 lety

      @@joshhardin666 Well, if your system is water cooled, just put a radiator on a hole on your wall, ideally a 480mm with the hardware you've got, with some noctua fans. Realistically, with the caliber of PC components you have, you won't push heat into your system at all. Or just use that heat for cooking.... Lol

  • @Swordonator
    @Swordonator Před 2 lety +17

    "Do you live in a jungle or something??"
    Me: "Even worse....Its a place called New Jersey

    • @TheRogueWolf
      @TheRogueWolf Před 2 lety +2

      Don't give up hope. I escaped New Jersey; you can, too!

    • @bepbep7418
      @bepbep7418 Před 2 lety

      Well yeah, Azrael did try to end the world in Red Bank after all 😁

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      @Jameel Khan HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

    • @shredderorokusaki3013
      @shredderorokusaki3013 Před 2 lety

      @@bepbep7418 HERE IN GREECE WE HAVE very hot summer and this week we have more than 40 c. My pc is CPU: RYZEN 7 1700
      RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHZCL15 GS KILL RIP JAWS
      GPU: GTX 970 G1 GAMING
      MONITOR: DELLP2416D 24'' 2560X1440 60 HZ IPS
      MOTHERBOARD: ASUS PRIME X370 PRO
      HDD1: WD BLACK 4 TB
      HDD2: 1 TB
      CASE: AEROCOOL 800
      SSD: MP 600 2TB
      PSU: CM 750M 750 WATT
      and i noticed that while playing games maxed 1440p the graphics card temprerature goes up to 87c! I wonder.... When finaly graphics card avalaibiltiy becoems better and get a RTX 3070 TI or RTX 3080TI(depends on which one of the two i wil find first) will in very hot days on summer the graphics card temperature gets even hooter or not?

  • @lorddoomhammer6870
    @lorddoomhammer6870 Před 2 lety

    All these points are extremely valid. I live in a very hot country. Our summers are over 40 Celsius. I have, by experience always thought of customising my setup (PC) to counteract for it however due to the extreme environmental affect I still have to use a 16000btu AC that vents cool air in the room. I have positioned it in a way that cool air hits the front of my pc (kind of like a data center cold aisle). This ensures my hardware always keeps at safe temps during brutal summers here.
    What I would like to see on this channel is power protection. Also by experience and some misfortune I have come up with a pretty safe setup that protects constant power supply. I had a very bad experience with a tower crane connected 30 meters away from my previous home attached to the same phase that the houses were being supplied.
    This issue was created when the crane moved (all day) and was drawing power from our mains. This resulted in me changing 4 motherboards in 6 months. I tried using line interactive UPS but was not even close to solving my problem.
    The way I resolved this and I have kept the same setup everywhere is a 3 way protection system.
    1. Industrial type AVR (Automatic Voltage Regulator - 5000KVA) Connected to surge protected mains
    2. 2000KVA Line Interactive UPS connected to the AVR.
    3. Power Breakout/Supply Sockets out of the UPS.
    This might not apply everywhere but it definitely helped me . I have not had a single hardware failure in 10 years +.
    PRO TIP: Best AVRs are the Mechanical Full AVR if you want to google some results.

  • @quorthonbeleuve
    @quorthonbeleuve Před 2 lety

    I live in a tropical country and is hot almost all year, so I grateful about this video topic