this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2024
23 points (100.0% liked)

technology

23303 readers
441 users here now

On the road to fully automated luxury gay space communism.

Spreading Linux propaganda since 2020

Rules:

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 
  1. OneDrive mirroring

Stop telling me that I am out of storage, I did not ask you to put my files there.

  1. Nvidia Linux drivers

A 2 month old driver from a desktop 3070 failed to detect a laptop 3050, and I had to chroot to remove the offending driver, buuuut

  1. Rescue USB

So it turns out the default Tumbleweed ISO is NOT a live image. Recue didn't work nor did usb boot until I realised. Burned LMDE onto the usb key, and I was able to get back up and running relatively quickly.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

It is definitely by design. The current generations from both manufacturers are absurdly efficient at dissipating heat from the die. The 3D cache layer knocks off some thermal headroom, but the modern chips are smart enough to thermal throttle before they hit their rated thermal ceiling. This is part of why undervolting is so effective with the AM4 and AM5 chips. For what it's worth, the AM4 Ryzens do not have temp spikes like this. And Intel seems to be hell-bent on making toaster ovens...

Weird that a Haswell i7 would run that hot -- unless I'm misremembering, you might have had one with the shitty thermal paste between the die and IHS; it wasn't an issue on all Haswell and Ivy Bridge chips, but they definitely had some QC issues with the paste drying out during those generations. I also had a 4790k in a workstation machine that I tricked work into paying for, and even on just a 120mm AIO (without the delid/liquid metal treatment), it still stayed below 60-65C during thermal torture tests (Linpack and Prime95 small FFTs). Maybe I did delid it and bring in some spare LM from home; it was a long time and several dead brain cells ago.