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Ninzya62 11.01.21 11:25 am

The processor is very hot (Dying Light)

I have quite good cooling, the maximum percentage in games heats up to 55 degrees, usually I hear my vidyuha buzzing in games (there is a specific cooler sound), and playing
Dying Light I do not hear the vidyuhi work at all and the percentage heats up at 75 degrees. When it comes to 80, the computer is automatically cut down during the game from overheating. What can be wrong? how to fix troubles with temperature. I put various patches (including the one that came out yesterday), lowered the graph to the very minimum, but still. The computer was already cut down 2 times from overheating when I played
Dying Light. The game is very cool, but now I'm afraid to play it, suddenly the percent will burn out = (
127 Comments
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manspider 11.01.21

Ninzya62
ty i est ALI

B
Brannan 11.01.21

Ninzya62
I can't advise anything sensible, I will only support Den-z2011.
They said a lot of nonsense and very few efficient words.

I will say that most likely there is some kind of incompatibility between the software and hardware regarding the processor. It happens.
If there is a full load on any core or on everything at once, then not only the core itself can warm up here. There are millions of transistors, diodes, etc. in the processor. The high temperature can be due to heating of the elements on the processor power supply (erroneously high voltage, current).
There is a very small chance that updating the mother's drivers and installing a different version of the game will solve the problem. There are only TWO ways: install better cooling or wait for patches.

Very unlikely, but try upgrading firewood to mother and see compatibility. Rarely is XP compatibility initially worth it. Or, on the contrary, try to put this compatibility to check.

Any game development involves, first of all, optimization for a particular processor. For processor instructions and for its architecture. Perhaps the game is more optimized for Intel architectures, less for AMD architectures, and your Piledriver processor is not the luckiest.
_________________________________________

It dawned a little.
There may be a problem with the motherboard in terms of powering the processor itself. With an uneven load of the cores, different voltage sag on different power lines is possible. Thus, due to a malfunction of the processor power supply circuit, there may be "pickups" and the PWM generates a signal incorrectly due to the "wrong" load.

It can also be assumed that there is a "broken" (faulty) core, which is very hot. In other games, it is not heavily involved for various reasons, so it does not show itself against the general background. In this game, it is possible that this kernel is loaded more than before.
________________________________________

Everyone or almost everyone says that there is no heating on similar processors. Still, I'm more inclined towards a hardware defect than a software defect.

T
TechnicWTR 11.01.21

In my opinion, your cooler cannot cope with cooling. I have fx8350 and r9 280x, in short they are very heat-generating guys, but there are no problems with overheating in this game. Cooler Zalman.

B
Brannan 11.01.21

TechnicWTR
Here 90% said that the cooler (cooling) is bad. There is absolutely no point in saying the same thing. If the problem persists, you need something new ...

R
RAZIEL_ 11.01.21

my i3 does not even heat up to 40 degrees with a boxed cooler.

P
Pavel Perepecha 11.01.21

THE COMPUTER TURNS OFF, THE PROCESSOR IS SILENTLY HEATING.
I have an AMD Athlon 64 X2 5000+ (DualCore) Brisbane processor
It was like this:
I turn on the computer and after working for 15-20 minutes the computer turns itself off, then this time became even less (10 minutes) "as when in general" even without load just watching a movie. Then even when working without loading nothing. Turned off and that's it.
After reading the forums, I realized that Brisbane processors are AMD Athlon (tm) 64 X2 Dual Core have a factory defect, the so-called "aging effect" (I had no problems for 5 years).
After downloading the program "Core Temp" it shows the temperature of the processor cores. I saw that my temperature changes very sharply. That is, I turn on the computer, run "Core Temp" shows 50 ° C, then then it rises gradually to 100 ° C, falls by 70 ° C, then again gradually to 100 ° C, then it reaches 120 ° C and "sharply" shows ~ 70-80 ° C I was alarmed by such a sharp drop in temperature (125 ° C and off). After all, if the cooler could not cope, the temperature would not change so dramatically.
After reading the forums, I found the so-called recovery method "Processors calcining". In general, my computer is now working and there are no shutdowns. And I did this.
There is a pan and a grate in the oven, move it out, take out the grate and put it on the penultimate upper level. I turn on the oven to a temperature of 200-220 ° C and heat it up for 10 minutes, during heating I wrap the processor (I did not wipe the thermal paste from the processor) in foil (foil from a chocolate bar). 10 minutes of preheating the oven has passed, we put the processor in the oven on the wire rack with the legs upside down with the lid down for 10 minutes. 10 minutes have passed, turn off the oven (without opening it) and wait 1 hour. After 1 hour, we take out the processor, unfold it from the foil and let it cool completely. We put in the computer.
Here is the whole process of Calcining the Processor.

S
Sidorovich12 11.01.21

Pavel Perepecha
By the way, most AMD chips have this problem. But the problem is that the silicon crystal itself degrades, therefore "frying" does not always help.