As discussed in
this old thread, I'm still trying to strike the perfect balance between noise and heat in my PC system.
Recently, I reduced the speed of the Vantech Stealth case fans to a level that I was happy with, and I'd already gotten the Zalman CNPS7000-AlCu for cooling my CPU a while ago. I'm not entirely happy with the Zalman CPU cooler since it's still pretty noisy when the CPU gets really taxed. But I digress...
I was left with the fact that my video card (one of
these) was the single noisiest entity in the case, with a tiny little fan that ran very very fast. So I looked into alternative
GPU cooling, and found
the ZM80D-HP heatpipe cooler. A couple of
reviews seemed to indicate it would work well, and it has. I'm glad I read the reviews, though, because they indicated a few things that were important, such as the fact that I'd need to work out something for the RAM chips since the package came with only enough ramchip heatsinks for a 128 meg card.
Anyway, it works but it seems (in cursory tests) to cause the video card to run a bit hotter than it did with the original noisy fan. I'm just wondering if it's TOO hot.
Nvidia shows two temperatures for the video card in the control panel, the GPU core temperature, and something called "Ambient Temperature", but I don't know where the latter is sampled from. When I'm really stressing the card (such as running 3dMark, or playing Far Cry, or what have you), it's getting up to 78c core and 60c ambient, which means the core temperature is 172 degrees farenheit.
Anyone know if that's acceptable for extended gameplay runs for a video card? The Nvidia control panel shows that as barely into "yellow" territory on their little bar graph. I dunno where the "red" starts on their scale, though.