As my manor grew, the CPU load skyrocketed, and that feeling of achievement was quickly replaced by plummeting frame rates. The default pump strategy on the B240 just isn't cut out for sustained high loads, with core temps hitting 86-91℃ and causing severe clock fluctuations. I tried enabling power-saving mode in BIOS, which saved 4℃ but made the simulation speed painfully slow. I went into the motherboard software, switched the pump from 'Smart' to 'Performance' mode, and lowered the radiator fan trigger threshold to 50℃. AIDA64 showed the peak temps drop from 91℃ to 66-72℃, and the FPS jitter vanished. I did have some annoying pump resonance at first, but tightening the radiator mounting screws solved it. Water temps now stay between 30-34℃. The performance panel confirms the mode switch worked perfectly. Last updated onApril 26, 2026 10:19 PM.
My DeepCool AK620 Ice Cube is hitting thermal limits during massive battles in Black Desert, causing lag.
Real-time MonitoringWhen dozens of mobs flood the screen, my FPS crashes from 100 down to 40, which is incredibly frustrating. While the AK620 has a dense fin stack, the stock paste had dried out over time, killing the heat transfer and pushing peak temps to 94℃. I tried lowering the CPU power limits in BIOS, which cut 8℃ but dropped my minimums below 30 FPS—a pathetic trade-off. I ended up stripping the cooler and applying high-conductivity liquid metal, then set the fan curve to trigger 100% speed at 75℃. Monitoring via RTSS, the core now stays between 65-72℃, and frame time variance shrank from 15-45ms to 10-14ms. I actually messed up the first liquid metal application and spilled some on the capacitors, which was a heart-attack moment until I cleaned it with isopropyl alcohol. Fans now run at 1300-1500 RPM. 3DMark CPU tests show thermal throttling is completely dead. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 4:58 PM.
My PCcooler RT620P can't keep the CPU cool during long stealth missions in Gray Zone Warfare, causing freezes.
Performance EvaluationThe optimization in this game is a joke; my CPU usage is pinned at 98%, and the RT620P feels like it's trying to cool a space heater. Temps were flirting with 95℃, triggering protection kicks that froze my screen for seconds—a total nightmare. I tried limiting the maximum processor state to 99% in Windows, which dropped temps by 5℃ but turned the game into a slideshow. I eventually flipped all my front case fans to intake and forced the RT620P fans into the motherboard's maximum voltage mode. HWiNFO showed temps drop from 96℃ to 78-84℃, and the freezes stopped. Interestingly, the initial airflow change created a weird vortex that actually raised my GPU temps by 3℃, so I had to add an extra rear exhaust fan to balance it. Fans are screaming at 1600 RPM now, sounding like a helicopter. I've exported all the thermal logs to confirm the stability. Last updated onApril 20, 2026 3:29 PM.
I'm getting huge frame drops in complex scenes in Metaphor: ReFantazio because the pump is too slow. Help?
TroubleshootingEntering large towns causes these jarring stutters that completely ruin the immersion after a smooth fight. Looking at the telemetry, the Valkyrie V360 Dracula pump was idling at 60% power, meaning the coolant wasn't moving fast enough to pull heat off the core, leaving temps hovering between 85-90℃. I tried lowering shadow quality, which gained me 5 FPS but didn't stop the thermal throttling—a total waste of time. I went into the motherboard control panel, switched the pump from 'Smart' to 'Full Speed,' and dialed the radiator PWM response time down to 0.1 seconds. In AIDA64, the peak temps plummeted from 89℃ to 68-74℃, and frame times tightened from 18-35ms to a consistent 12-15ms. I did notice some annoying bubble gurgling when I first hit full speed, but flipping the radiator to a top-mount position killed the noise. Coolant temps now sit at 32-36℃. After a two-hour marathon session, the stuttering is gone. Last updated onMarch 23, 2026 9:03 AM.
My Thermalright PA120 SE can't keep up during intense combat in PBZ, causing massive clock drops. Why?
Software UsageWhenever I'm chaining high-frequency combos, the CPU temps spike to 88-92℃, causing the clock speeds to bounce erratically between 3.2-4.5GHz. This instability makes the combat feel sluggish and imprecise. I noticed the default fan profile on the PA120 SE is way too conservative below 70℃, so heat builds up faster than the fins can dissipate it. I initially tried switching the Windows power plan to Balanced, which dropped temps by 3℃ but tanked my 1% lows from 65 FPS to 42 FPS—totally unacceptable. I eventually dove into the BIOS, set the fan curve to hit 50% speed at 60℃ and forced 100% at 80℃, while applying a -0.05V core voltage offset. Checking HWiNFO, the load temps dropped from 91℃ to a stable 76-82℃. At first, the full-speed fans sounded like a jet engine at night, but adding a stepped ramp between 60-70℃ fixed the noise. Fans now hover around 1400-1600 RPM. Stress tests confirm no more thermal throttling, and the settings are locked in. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 8:44 AM.