The Importance of Proper Cooling in a Gaming PC
Over the past couple weeks, I’ve barely played any games at all. I got back into F.E.A.R. and have almost finished it, but my system has not being running so hot lately – actually, it’s been running very hot, which brings me to the topic of this post.
Over the past year I’ve replaced just about every piece of hardware. I started with the motherboard and worked my way out. Most recently replacing my 266MHz memory with a pair of 512MB, 400MHz Corsair XMS ProSeries RAM. Since my CPU has a front side bus of 800MHz, I was looking forward to a pretty significant performance increase. Unfortunately, this wasn’t the case at all. After installing the RAM, I noticed no increase at all. Still the same hiccups and lags remained. It was time to do some serious troubleshooting – having dropped so much cash on my machine over the past year, I wasn’t ready to give up on it just yet. I knew there had to be a cause for the slowdowns and poor performance I’m seeing.
First, I ran some benchmarks. I used some standalone apps like 3dMark05, Sandra and Fraps. The results were upsetting to say the least. After a fresh reboot, I fired up Counter Strike Source and ran the video stress test. First run was 113 FPS – sweet! I ran it again immediately which returned an abysmal 57 FPS. Once more… 48 FPS. This continued until I reached around 30 FPS. At this point, I wasn’t really sure what to do. I’ve never seen a performance loss like that.


As some said on the message boards, I’m really lucky I didn’t damage anything! I could have fried the CPU or the motherboard. And I’m sure if I kept pushing it, I would have.
At the end of all of this, I feel like a total idiot for not having thought of this earlier. But I wanted to share my story in hopes that I might clue others before it’s too late. If you work your machine hard at all, you should make sure you have proper circulation and adequate cooling. And this doesn’t just apply to gaming, but graphic designers, video editors, 3d animators – all of these people use applications that are very demanding. If you fall into any of these categories, you might want to take a look inside your case and check up on your temperatures to make sure you’re a-ok.