this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
11 points (82.4% liked)
Buildapc
3790 readers
20 users here now
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I agree with this, you probably dislodged or loosened the cooler. Which needs firm pressure to work properly, causing one of your cores to spike in temperature.
Distance to TjMAX is a value opposite to temperature. If it's 100°C, it means the core's temperature is 0°C (at least for most of the Intel CPUs). The core temperature doesn't spike to 0 though...
So what you're suggesting is that it's not the actual temperature but rather a sensor issue? Could be, the problem is this:
CPU coolers have one job, and there is only one way to properly attach them. Any tempering with that system will have big consequences. If redoing that doesn't fix the issue, and you notice no other problems at all, might as well be a sensor issue.
Well then I guess I don't have a PC anymore because I can't get it repaired any time soon. Thank you for help though
You sound like you'd be able to figure it out, I'm sure if you look up your cooler on the web you'll find video and instructions. If you have cooling paste available I'd say go for it.
The problem is that the cooler is absolutely massive (because cheap materials = bad heat conductivity = more volume required) and the screws are unaccessible unless I remove the motherboard and its radiators (and I'm not even sure in that). I can try but I know I may not be able to reconnect the cables (the case is not cable management friendly at all). And also I have a physical disability so I can't do anything like that myself anyways. Oh and the cooler is some kind of noname ODM manufacturer I think so finding instructions for it is hard or even impossible