Seeing my 1% lows finally stabilize above 70 FPS was a huge relief—this is how the game is supposed to feel. Before the fix, the stock paste on my Blizzard T600 had dried out, causing core temps to swing wildly between 90-96℃. I tried downclocking the CPU to stop the heat, but the physics calculations in-game started lagging, which was completely unacceptable. I stripped it down and applied 15W/mK phase-change thermal pads and flipped my case fans to aggressive exhaust mode. AIDA64 showed the peak temp drop from 96℃ to 72-78℃, and my clocks finally locked at 4.8GHz. I actually messed up the first install and temps went up by 2℃ because of low mounting pressure, but a quick re-tighten solved it. Now it sits at 70-76℃. Thermal throttling is gone, and frame times are a rock-solid 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 6, 2026 11:18 AM.
My UE5 demo project crashes during full rendering on a Thermalright PA120 V3. Do I need to fix the fan curve?
Overclocking SettingsIt's unbelievable that a top-tier dual-tower cooler could just fold under UE5's rendering load; I was halfway through a render and the whole PC just black-screened. The PA120 V3's default fan curve was way too conservative, letting the CPU temp rocket from 50℃ to 102℃ in 30 seconds, triggering the motherboard's emergency shutdown. I tried switching to a high-performance power plan, but that just made it worse—the crash happened in 15 seconds. Total disaster. I went into the BIOS and set a much more aggressive stepped fan curve, and I actually took the cooler off and re-tightened the screws in a cross-pattern to ensure the mounting pressure was even. HWInfo showed the peak temp dropped from 102℃ to 88 - 92℃, and the render finally finished. I noticed one fan making a weird rattling noise after the reinstall, but it was just a cable rubbing against the frame. Power draw is steady at 210 - 230 Watts with fans hitting 1500 - 1800 RPM. I saved the fan profile so I can restore it after any BIOS update. The system response is now snappy. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 7:44 PM.
My PC Cooler RT620 ARGB can't seem to handle Elden Ring combat, causing massive clock drops. Why?
Software UsageDuring intense Boss fights, my frame rate would randomly tank from 60 FPS down to 42 FPS, and that choppy feeling was driving me insane. I checked HWiNFO and saw the RT620's heat pipes were hitting peaks of 88-94℃ under full load, triggering a brutal thermal throttle. I initially tried undervolting in the BIOS to cut the heat, but while temps dropped by 3℃, I actually lost about 5 FPS overall—a total waste of time. I ended up ripping the cooler off and swapping to a high-end 14W/mK thermal paste, then manually slammed the fan curve to 100% once it hit 75℃. In AIDA64 stress tests, the peak temp plummeted from 94℃ to a steady 74-80℃, and my clocks finally locked in at 4.6GHz. To be honest, the fans sounded like a jet engine taking off at first, but after tweaking the start speed to 600 RPM, it hit a sweet spot. With CPU load around 82%, the heat clears out instantly. Monitoring tools confirm the heat soak is gone, and frame times are now rock steady at 5.1-16.4ms. Last updated onFebruary 19, 2026 9:03 AM.
I'm getting awful frame drops in Lost Ark raids due to uneven pressure on my Hyper 612 APEX. Help?
TroubleshootingMy core clocks were jumping wildly around 3.5GHz, and the game would hitch every five seconds—it felt like I was playing through molasses. Looking back at the install, the Hyper 612 APEX base had developed a tiny 0.2mm gap after a few long sessions, sending core temps screaming up to 96-99℃. I tried capping the CPU power to 80% via software, which dropped temps by 8℃, but the loading screens became an absolute nightmare. I couldn't stand it, so I tore the whole module down and used the cross-tightening method to ensure the mount was perfectly level, while also cleaning up my case airflow. Checking RTSS, my frame times stopped swinging between 15-42ms and tightened up to 11-16ms. I actually over-tightened the screws at first and slightly warped the motherboard, but backing them off half a turn fixed the stability. Now temps sit comfortably between 68-74℃. Thermal throttling is dead, and my RAM stays chilled at 58-63℃. Last updated onFebruary 21, 2026 8:49 PM.
I finally got the game running at ultra settings, but during explosions, the FPS would plummet from 120 to 40. That sudden drop from hype to anger was real. The default power limits on the i7-14700KF cause the clock speed to crash from 5.6 GHz to 3.8 GHz under sustained load, creating those massive stutters. I tried 'Ultimate Performance' mode in Windows, but that just made the E-core scheduling a mess and pushed temps over 100℃—completely unacceptable. I went into the BIOS, unlocked PL1 and PL2 to 253 Watts, and set a core voltage offset of -0.05V to keep the heat in check. In Cinebench R23, my multi-core score jumped from 34,000 to 36,500, with clocks holding steady at 5.2 - 5.4 GHz. I had two instant reboots after unlocking the power wall because the cooler couldn't keep up, but ramping the AIO fans to 100% fixed it. CPU temps now sit at 85 - 92℃ with power draw between 220 - 240 Watts. Frame times are now a stable 8.2 - 11.5ms. Last updated onFebruary 19, 2026 3:34 PM.