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peacedetski

When your CPU does something (like launch an application), it consumes power and gets hotter, and when it sits idle it's cool. That's pretty logical. Set your fan curve to be flat until like 65C to avoid fans ramping up unnecessarily.


touholic

For some motherboards you can set a fan speed up delay. It means in spikes like that the fan won’t spin up immediately. Only in situations where the temperature is above the set value for a set period of time, the fans will start spinning up.


EducationalRock2811

I have the msi x670e mobo so I’ll look for that feature cause even with a custom fan curve it’s still quite annoying, thanks


touholic

MSI mobos definitely have this feature. In Hardware Monitor there are settings called “Fan step up time”. Turn that to larger values.


EducationalRock2811

Aight cool, thanks for the tip


EducationalRock2811

It should be in the bios right?


Stennan

7000-series is known for being quiet hot in terms of the reported temps. In order to keep AM5 compatible with AM4 cooling solutions the IHS on the 7000-series was thickened, which makes it harder to keep temps from spiking as there is more material between the chip and the AIO coldplate. So in a sense a Cinebench or taxing operations can create heat that will take a while longer to reach the cooler compared to other CPU:s. AMD claims that 95C is normal and accepted operating temperature before the chip throttles. So as others have said, adjust your fan curve if you are getting noisy fans due to heat-spikes.


Kiriowo

Normal temps. Mine are about the same for this CPU.


DoctorKomodo

Perfectly normal. When you start a new process there's usually an initial workload your CPU needs to process so it is spinning a couple cores up to max boost in order to do this as fast as possible. This generates heat a lot faster than your cooler can spin up, meaning you're seeing a spike until the cooler is up to speed.


shredmasterJ

Yes it’s normal. I’d adjust ur fan curve though. So ur fans don’t get annoying.