The Corsair LL are not good radiator fans and thick radiators will cause you to have low airflow even at high rpms. Any ideas as to what I should look at first? Am I actually good to go? Pic of the system below. Also, I see people with a 3080ti overclocked with my waterblock saying that they stay in the 40s on the core. That seems high to me given the research I've done on other systems. That gives me an Air-Water delta of 13 to 14C. At that point, I'm kind of at equilibrium with all of my fans are running around 1700-1800 rpm, so not exactly quiet (max fan speed is 2150 or so and max pump speed is around 4500 for reference). With ambient temperature of usually 23 to 24C, the average liquid temperature gets up to around 37.5C. I'm cooling based on liquid temperatures. The GPU tends to get to about 56C on the core (HWINFO reading) and stays there. Is this problem solely the difference in my CPU being last in the loop? Is the CPU stretching it's legs with better cooling? In Microsoft Flight Simulator 2000 (Geforce Experience settings at 1440p), CPU gets as hot as the 80s at times, but normally runs in the 60s I think. I know it's just a spike and if I run 3D Mark, I actually get a better CPU score now than I did with the single 360. When I was only cooling the CPU with a 360, it would never get close to that. even when the GPU is running idle at 27 or 28C and ambient temp is 23 or 24C. The 3080 EVGA FTW Ultra is at complete stock.Īnyway, my CPU will now spike up to 90C (Tctl/Tdie in HWINFO) with regularity when opening programs, etc. I didn't mess with voltage other than to lower it on one of the CCDs by 15 mv. Coolant flow goes Reservoir->240 rad->360 rad->GPU->CPU->Reservoir. I also have 2 LL120s as intakes on the bottom of the case. Each radiator has Corsair LL120s on it in push configuration. I also have some ambient temperature probes attached to the aquaero. I have two inline water temp sensors, one in the distro-plate and one between the GPU and CPU. Everything is controlled with an Aquacomputer Aquaero 6. I have the pump set at a constant 4000 rpm and I have a curve on the fans. The pump is an EK DDC 4.25 pump in the EK Lian-Li Distroplate. I have a Corsair XR7 360mm radiator (54mm thick) and a Corsair XR7 240mm radiator (54mm thick). I'm cooling a 5950x with EK Quantum block and a 3080 with EK Vector block. I've also replaced the front glass with a custom panel where one of my radiators is attached. This problem was eventually fixed in Visual Studio 2012 Update 4.The case is a Lian-Li PC011 Dynamic that I've modified by cutting the restrictive bottom floorplate out to better accommodate intake fans. This was caused due to certain missing function exports in the runtime DLL msvcr110.dll that shipped with VS2012 RTM. "The procedure entry point_ crtCreateSymbolicLinkW could not be located in the dynamic link library MSVCR110.dll" If you use Visual Studio 2012 RTM product to build C apps and use certain functionality from the C Standard Template Library in your projects, then you might run into a runtime failure similar to the following: Update for Microsoft Visual C 2012 Update 4 Redistributable Package (KB3032622) I don't know it sure seems like windows update would see your version is old and give you a service pack for that ? like I got from them here I guess you seen you may have to install the 32 and also 64 bit of Microsoft Visual C ? Let me ask one more thing- open your hard drive to its files go to windows open it and then to system 32 open it and scroll down the list to see if its listed there at all if so then do the same for the wow64 it should be in bothĬ:\Windows\SysWOW64-created Saturday, June 11, 2011, 2:58:52 AMĬ:\Windows\System32- created Saturday, June 11, 2011, 2:15:38 AM
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