With stock I was getting temps around 90-95 when playing games and it was throttling the CPU. Used my old air cooler and now the temps are around 50-60c at full load. I'm from India so the weather is hot as it is.
@@fahadzargar8975 yeah absolutely ! It should get the job done man.. temps would be somewhere between 70-80c on full load in worst case scenario. Which is perfect. Go with a decent thermal paste like artic 4 and you're good to go.. stock cooler sucks !
I have the exact same tool kit, built my current desktop with it and use it to work on my RC car, everything is still working great (two plus years now). This was one of the best investments I ever made for tools
I feel that as time has progressed AMD has gone the Intel route and is cheaping out on the included cpu cooler compared to early Ryzen 😢 I know the manufacturing node has improved, resulting in better thermals, but it doesn’t mean saving maybe a dollar for a noticeably reduced performance on their non-X skus’ is warranted.
Personally I would rather be that AMD sell those CPUs without a cooler and give a price discount as running this stock is always just for emergency use (waiting for new cooler, old cooler broke, no money etc.), not for serious gaming build. The noise is bad and the performance lacking. No headroom regarding heat dissipation so if you overclock your GPU, RAM etc. not even your CPU, it probably won't cool it. I'd consider this kind of cooler only for limited use and with very good case air flow.
Kind of glad you posted this unexpected topic. I've been enjoying my new 5600x system for half a year now, so far with the stock cooler. The thing is that shortly after building the pc I bought a Be Quiet Pure Rock Slim 2, and because there have been no issues I've just been putting off switching to the modestly better cooler. I'm going to put a note on my calendar to get around to that this coming week! My wraith has never been loud by the way, but I do notice when it accelerates.
Yep. Worth noting that a LOT of GPUs are louder than the little stealth cooler, so it's unlikely you'll really notice it much. It just sorta fades into the background noise of the room.
I'm have ordered a 5600x boxed version including cooling. A year has gone, did you try any silent version, which you could recommend or tried any other?
@@tajamalrafiq3651 I have been very happy with the Pure Rock Slim 2 and have had no need to try other coolers, however there continue to be an improved selection of new competitive low cost coolers. Some of the obvious ones are Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 or Phantom Spirit, and more recently check out ID-Cooling SSE-224-XTS or ID-Cooling Frozn models. In some regions they are said to be more price friendly than the Thermalright choices. Best wishes.
I have building pc’s for well over 20years and I’ve always used these cheaper pc toolkits for my builds and one regular Phillips head screwdriver and they work flawlessly! While I-Fix-It toolkits are a step up in quality …. imo it don’t justify their pricing!
I have used some of the wraith stealth prism coolers and thought to they were adequate. I never checked to see if the CPU was throttling under heavy load. Thanks for the info.
Thanks for posting this. The point you made about Wraith and airflow is crucial. I'm running the 5600 and Wraith in a Goodisory A02, and the temps hover around 95C after 15 minutes of gaming. But if I take the lid off, it's around 65-70C. So I'm deciding whether to upgrade the cooler or run w/o the lid (maybe add dust filter on top)
man, I hope you answer my comment, I have an 5600 as well, when I play Elden Ring with everything on ultra, my temps go above 70°, like 78°, Im gonna upgrade the cooler, how you solved the problem??
I have an pc case with 6 fucking fans, tho the fans that I'm mentioning is the ones who came with the case, but still, the cpu temps reach 78° when I play ED, or when I run an stress test
@@ranger5389 I cheaped out and just bought a dust filter to replace the top lid of my case. My PC sits horizontally w/ the fan and mobo facing up. If I get more money, I may upgrade the cooler to Noctua L9a. I'm also using a 250w pico power supply since I'm only running an RX-6400. So, I added two more case fans where one would normally put a power supply to extract more hot air. That said, it only helped to reduce the temp about 2-3 more degrees or so. But, I'll take anything i can get. Hope that helps.. and good luck on your set-up.
@@tobylee1170 I managed to make the temperature drop a little without loosing any performance, I have set the fan rotation to max, and it only gets to 77 for a few seconds, and then drops again to 70°, and 69°. Still, not the ideal, but I'll upgrade my vga and then I'll buy an good cooler, good luck with your setup too bro
about coolers, I want to buy an noctua l9a in the future too, because it's small and efficient, I kinda feel like those big coolers will make the air flow on my pc worse, in parts like the vrm idk, but noctua is so hella expensive here in my country
Stock cooler works perfectly for me on the 5600G except in summer. When the ambient air temperature exceeds 30 °C I start to see thermal throttling. Below 30 °C ambient I can run full tilt all day long at a toasty 80 °C. Instead of upgrading the cooler I just settled on using summer afternoons for retro gaming, because otherwise the gpu + cpu are dumping just shy of 300 watts into my room and it gets stuffy really quick.
thought stock cooler would be good enough since I'm pairing it with a 5500, but the fan gets too loud under load plus temps are a bit high (not throttling though) Anyways I ended up spending extra for a better one
As someone whose just built their pc yesterday (this is my new one, old one was rocking a rx6700 with a r5 5500, new ones got the rx6800 with the r5 5600), id get an aftermarket cooler, i have my setup built in a ASUS ap201, I've added four fans (2 on bottom for intake, two on top for exhaust, and one on the side as exhaust) and I'm running typically 81-82 degrees Celsius. I'm happy with the performance, but I've ordered an aftermarket cooler to make sure that under a heavy load, my CPU stays cool and safe. I originally ran the wraith cooler only because my r5 5500 stayed around 73 at most, which for me is comfortable. But the eighties kind of jars me. I know thermal throttling doesn't occur until around 90 Celsius, I'd just rather stay away from high temps as much as possible.
@@mrmunna9072 I gave my old one to my brother because he was stuck on console for a while. Plus it’s not like I could comfortably hop on am5 saying most people don’t uprgade for years. By the time I’d need to upgrade, Am5 would be dead too. That’s something people don’t understand. Don’t need to upgrade your system every time a new generation comes out. That’s a waste of money, like the people on am5 don’t need to upgrade from it for a while. Now they’ll have more options, but by the time they’re in need of an upgrade, am5 will be dead too. Saying that it’s “end of life” is 2026.
@@Slayd2Pieces My first PC was Intel's core i3/i5 4th gen. This year I bought a Ryzen 5600. So AM4 is new to me, but it's not popular anymore (after the arrival of AM5) so it's very cheap. But if I had a very old AM4 PC, I really would have bought a AM5 pc. It's expensive, but you know, it's already 2 years old...
@@mrmunna9072 true but to what I said, saying that I have a 5600 and I have no issues utilizing my system that’s fairly powerful for 1440p. I’ll prob not need to upgrade for give or take 4-6 years depending on how games tend to progress. So with that in mind, am5 would effectively be dead. So I don’t see the use case when in the time I’d need an upgrade. The am5 system would be out. But at that point I could upgrade to whatever am5 has as its technical best and repeat the same process.
@@ElNegus9985 No, if you already have an AM4 motherboard and decent ram (presumably The Joeker does), then upgrading to a 5600/X or 5700X/5800X as a drop-in solution, makes a lot more sense than buying a z690 motherboard, over-priced (and what will eventually be low-end) DDR5, and the Intel cpu itself.
Just upgraded the 3500x/Rog B450F to 5600 ($180) and a half year old used Rog x570F ($120), sold the old U+mobo for $160 and stick with the same Ram and the exisiting 6700xt, for gaming, the upgrade grants aroud +15% more performance for around $150 cost, pretty happy with the upgrade for now as DDR5 and Z series boards is kinda priced atm.
He didn't say whether he used the pre-applied thermal paste on the Wraith Stealth or if he cleaned it off and used a better 3rd party thermal paste. I am getting way higher temps (like 85-90C at only 30-40% utilization). I am wondering if it makes a big difference to clean off the stock thermal paste and apply something like arctic silver in its place.
@Merryweather Fleet I ended up getting the $20 Thermalright Assassin X120 from Amazon to replace it. My CPU temp now peaks at 65C in the same games that were spiking to 94C with the Wraith Stealth.
Bought Id-cooling se-224-xt black with the 5600 off Amazon UK. Was easy to install the cooler on my budget Gigabyte A520m board. Keeps the cpu cool and not too noisy if on normal /silent bios cpu profile.
That BASIC tool kit has almost everything i would need to work on Cars to Controllers hahah tht shii isnt Basic at all thts the 4090 of screwdrive sets
considering that this cpu is now 190 dollars canadian and the included fan is worth 40$ itself , i think its an awesome deal. its also only a 65w tdp and only 6 cores so it dont require a very powerful cooler. if you do alot extreme gaming and do overclocking , yes you better get a 3rd party cooler which performs better. you can also have more case cooling which does help. you could also buy the even better ryzen 7 5700x or 5800x which are 8 cores and get yourself a great cooler since they come with no coolers and do require a better one than the one included with the 5600.
very weak coolers for the Ryzen 5 series and not stealth at all. I get up to 85 C under havey load. That's unacceptable, AMD should have included a capable cooler or no cooler at all.
@@G80M3C I fixed this issue by undervolting the CPU by -28, I got better benchmarks and it wont go above 76 (in the summer). So I didn't replace the cooler, I still have the AMD Wraith
I have a issue. Used Ryzen 5 5600 with the boxed cooler, activated xmp for ram with 3200 MHz and I see the temperature of CPU 96°C in stress test of Aida64. I think that is too much. What is wrong ?
Exactly like I wrote in another post, probably the RAM is heating up more because it's now overclocked -> so more heat in the case = higher CPU temps indirectly. Also maybe the CPU is now being utilized more as with faster RAM you have basically faster CPU (Ryzens are very dependant on RAM speed). This cooler is only suitable as emergency, not any serious work. How good is your case airflow? Cause OCing RAM can increase it's temps by 10°C easily and all that air is being sucked by the CPU cooler.
@@kovrcek Stock DDR4 ram with factory 3200 MHz you still have to turn on xmp for the motherboard to see the 3200 otherwise it keeps it at stock DDR4 speeds 2xxx
The real question then becomes whether or not you can use the extra horsepower the 3060 has in traditional rendering over the 1660. Well, that and pricing obviously lol. Prices may be coming down, but they're definitely hit and miss right now.
I use my 5600 with stock cooler. every game I play runs 60~73°C except Battlefield 5, as soons i open the game is goes to 83°, makes no sense, anybody know what coud be ? ty
It's fine, it's just that gaming ( even multi core heavy ones like BF5) isn't as heavy on all the threads so your cpu tries to boost a little more causing temps to be slightly higher than a full core load ( slower clocks) but still, if noise doesn't bother you 80c isn't gonna kill your cpu. You can also try undervolting and save even 10c :)
for comparison, I used the old R5 1600 cooler I had and it works MUCH better than the r5 5600 one... It's a shame AMD is going through the same intel route!
i have this cpu and i played every game u say, the temps will be around 80 to 85 some say its fine but temps around 70 will give u more performance and life time soo...
Perfect Video solved all my problems and questions.
With stock I was getting temps around 90-95 when playing games and it was throttling the CPU. Used my old air cooler and now the temps are around 50-60c at full load. I'm from India so the weather is hot as it is.
I am facing the same problem. What is the cheapest treatment for it.
@@fahadzargar8975 just get beefy air cooler..make sure it has am4 support. And you're good to go
Budget air cooler doesn't help?.. like the deepcool AK400 level
@@fahadzargar8975 yeah absolutely ! It should get the job done man.. temps would be somewhere between 70-80c on full load in worst case scenario. Which is perfect. Go with a decent thermal paste like artic 4 and you're good to go.. stock cooler sucks !
Which cooler are you using i m also facing this issue
I have the exact same tool kit, built my current desktop with it and use it to work on my RC car, everything is still working great (two plus years now). This was one of the best investments I ever made for tools
I feel that as time has progressed AMD has gone the Intel route and is cheaping out on the included cpu cooler compared to early Ryzen 😢 I know the manufacturing node has improved, resulting in better thermals, but it doesn’t mean saving maybe a dollar for a noticeably reduced performance on their non-X skus’ is warranted.
I mean it's better than not getting anything I guess lmao
Personally I would rather be that AMD sell those CPUs without a cooler and give a price discount as running this stock is always just for emergency use (waiting for new cooler, old cooler broke, no money etc.), not for serious gaming build. The noise is bad and the performance lacking. No headroom regarding heat dissipation so if you overclock your GPU, RAM etc. not even your CPU, it probably won't cool it. I'd consider this kind of cooler only for limited use and with very good case air flow.
Kind of glad you posted this unexpected topic. I've been enjoying my new 5600x system for half a year now, so far with the stock cooler. The thing is that shortly after building the pc I bought a Be Quiet Pure Rock Slim 2, and because there have been no issues I've just been putting off switching to the modestly better cooler. I'm going to put a note on my calendar to get around to that this coming week! My wraith has never been loud by the way, but I do notice when it accelerates.
Yep. Worth noting that a LOT of GPUs are louder than the little stealth cooler, so it's unlikely you'll really notice it much. It just sorta fades into the background noise of the room.
I'm have ordered a 5600x boxed version including cooling. A year has gone, did you try any silent version, which you could recommend or tried any other?
@@tajamalrafiq3651 I have been very happy with the Pure Rock Slim 2 and have had no need to try other coolers, however there continue to be an improved selection of new competitive low cost coolers. Some of the obvious ones are Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 or Phantom Spirit, and more recently check out ID-Cooling SSE-224-XTS or ID-Cooling Frozn models. In some regions they are said to be more price friendly than the Thermalright choices. Best wishes.
I have building pc’s for well over 20years and I’ve always used these cheaper pc toolkits for my builds and one regular Phillips head screwdriver and they work flawlessly! While I-Fix-It toolkits are a step up in quality …. imo it don’t justify their pricing!
I have used some of the wraith stealth prism coolers and thought to they were adequate. I never checked to see if the CPU was throttling under heavy load. Thanks for the info.
Thanks for the review mate ! i am awaiting the AM4 bracket for my H110i cooler, until then im touching 81C while full load max STX64
that's an actually insane difference
Thanks for posting this. The point you made about Wraith and airflow is crucial. I'm running the 5600 and Wraith in a Goodisory A02, and the temps hover around 95C after 15 minutes of gaming. But if I take the lid off, it's around 65-70C. So I'm deciding whether to upgrade the cooler or run w/o the lid (maybe add dust filter on top)
man, I hope you answer my comment, I have an 5600 as well, when I play Elden Ring with everything on ultra, my temps go above 70°, like 78°, Im gonna upgrade the cooler, how you solved the problem??
I have an pc case with 6 fucking fans, tho the fans that I'm mentioning is the ones who came with the case, but still, the cpu temps reach 78° when I play ED, or when I run an stress test
@@ranger5389 I cheaped out and just bought a dust filter to replace the top lid of my case. My PC sits horizontally w/ the fan and mobo facing up. If I get more money, I may upgrade the cooler to Noctua L9a. I'm also using a 250w pico power supply since I'm only running an RX-6400. So, I added two more case fans where one would normally put a power supply to extract more hot air. That said, it only helped to reduce the temp about 2-3 more degrees or so. But, I'll take anything i can get. Hope that helps.. and good luck on your set-up.
@@tobylee1170 I managed to make the temperature drop a little without loosing any performance, I have set the fan rotation to max, and it only gets to 77 for a few seconds, and then drops again to 70°, and 69°.
Still, not the ideal, but I'll upgrade my vga and then I'll buy an good cooler, good luck with your setup too bro
about coolers, I want to buy an noctua l9a in the future too, because it's small and efficient, I kinda feel like those big coolers will make the air flow on my pc worse, in parts like the vrm idk, but noctua is so hella expensive here in my country
Stock cooler works perfectly for me on the 5600G except in summer. When the ambient air temperature exceeds 30 °C I start to see thermal throttling. Below 30 °C ambient I can run full tilt all day long at a toasty 80 °C. Instead of upgrading the cooler I just settled on using summer afternoons for retro gaming, because otherwise the gpu + cpu are dumping just shy of 300 watts into my room and it gets stuffy really quick.
thought stock cooler would be good enough since I'm pairing it with a 5500, but the fan gets too loud under load plus temps are a bit high (not throttling though)
Anyways I ended up spending extra for a better one
As someone whose just built their pc yesterday (this is my new one, old one was rocking a rx6700 with a r5 5500, new ones got the rx6800 with the r5 5600), id get an aftermarket cooler, i have my setup built in a ASUS ap201, I've added four fans (2 on bottom for intake, two on top for exhaust, and one on the side as exhaust) and I'm running typically 81-82 degrees Celsius. I'm happy with the performance, but I've ordered an aftermarket cooler to make sure that under a heavy load, my CPU stays cool and safe. I originally ran the wraith cooler only because my r5 5500 stayed around 73 at most, which for me is comfortable. But the eighties kind of jars me. I know thermal throttling doesn't occur until around 90 Celsius, I'd just rather stay away from high temps as much as possible.
Why did you bought two AM4 PC?
@@mrmunna9072 I gave my old one to my brother because he was stuck on console for a while. Plus it’s not like I could comfortably hop on am5 saying most people don’t uprgade for years. By the time I’d need to upgrade, Am5 would be dead too. That’s something people don’t understand. Don’t need to upgrade your system every time a new generation comes out. That’s a waste of money, like the people on am5 don’t need to upgrade from it for a while. Now they’ll have more options, but by the time they’re in need of an upgrade, am5 will be dead too. Saying that it’s “end of life” is 2026.
@@Slayd2Pieces My first PC was Intel's core i3/i5 4th gen. This year I bought a Ryzen 5600. So AM4 is new to me, but it's not popular anymore (after the arrival of AM5) so it's very cheap. But if I had a very old AM4 PC, I really would have bought a AM5 pc. It's expensive, but you know, it's already 2 years old...
@@mrmunna9072 true but to what I said, saying that I have a 5600 and I have no issues utilizing my system that’s fairly powerful for 1440p. I’ll prob not need to upgrade for give or take 4-6 years depending on how games tend to progress. So with that in mind, am5 would effectively be dead. So I don’t see the use case when in the time I’d need an upgrade. The am5 system would be out. But at that point I could upgrade to whatever am5 has as its technical best and repeat the same process.
@@Slayd2Pieces Why are you saying a new gen processor series will be dead? Remember how long AM4 has dominated the market.
I was considering getting this CPU. right now I have the Ryzen 5 2600
Go with intel, it'll be futureproof with then z690 mobo and 12th gen support for ddr5.
@@ElNegus9985 No, if you already have an AM4 motherboard and decent ram (presumably The Joeker does), then upgrading to a 5600/X or 5700X/5800X as a drop-in solution, makes a lot more sense than buying a z690 motherboard, over-priced (and what will eventually be low-end) DDR5, and the Intel cpu itself.
Just upgraded the 3500x/Rog B450F to 5600 ($180) and a half year old used Rog x570F ($120), sold the old U+mobo for $160 and stick with the same Ram and the exisiting 6700xt, for gaming, the upgrade grants aroud +15% more performance for around $150 cost, pretty happy with the upgrade for now as DDR5 and Z series boards is kinda priced atm.
He didn't say whether he used the pre-applied thermal paste on the Wraith Stealth or if he cleaned it off and used a better 3rd party thermal paste. I am getting way higher temps (like 85-90C at only 30-40% utilization). I am wondering if it makes a big difference to clean off the stock thermal paste and apply something like arctic silver in its place.
Yes it does, mine dropped more than 10C
@Merryweather Fleet I ended up getting the $20 Thermalright Assassin X120 from Amazon to replace it. My CPU temp now peaks at 65C in the same games that were spiking to 94C with the Wraith Stealth.
2,29min vom video rum nicht eine sekunde den kühler gesehen. ehre
Bought Id-cooling se-224-xt black with the 5600 off Amazon UK. Was easy to install the cooler on my budget Gigabyte A520m board. Keeps the cpu cool and not too noisy if on normal /silent bios cpu profile.
In the future, would you please test not just stock cpu settings but also PBO2 on? Thank you.
That BASIC tool kit has almost everything i would need to work on Cars to Controllers hahah tht shii isnt Basic at all thts the 4090 of screwdrive sets
I get 50 c on my stock cooler with amd pbo undervolting technic without loosing performance
considering that this cpu is now 190 dollars canadian and the included fan is worth 40$ itself , i think its an awesome deal. its also only a 65w tdp and only 6 cores so it dont require a very powerful cooler. if you do alot extreme gaming and do overclocking , yes you better get a 3rd party cooler which performs better. you can also have more case cooling which does help. you could also buy the even better ryzen 7 5700x or 5800x which are 8 cores and get yourself a great cooler since they come with no coolers and do require a better one than the one included with the 5600.
That’s too much the 5600 x is enough
with 3 140mm fans and 1 120mm i still get 88 degrees and my cpu starts throteling at 83 degrees
My stock cooler with 1 intake and 1 outtake case fan run temp at 65 while gaming
very weak coolers for the Ryzen 5 series and not stealth at all. I get up to 85 C under havey load. That's unacceptable, AMD should have included a capable cooler or no cooler at all.
These CPUs can fo over 90°, chill
@@ThePipojp can go but its close to thermal trottling, the boost will be turned off and you will have reduced performance. Learn about it.
I ran cinibench I it hit 95C!!!! but what was strange is that the cpu refused to throttle
@@G80M3C I fixed this issue by undervolting the CPU by -28, I got better benchmarks and it wont go above 76 (in the summer). So I didn't replace the cooler, I still have the AMD Wraith
@@G80M3Cit's throttled once hit 100c
nice video very helpful
I'm confused as to how you used the i35 cooler when it's Intel specific compatibility, did I miss something? Arctic's own website states so.
He made a mistake. It's A35, the AMD version of the same cooler.
I have a issue. Used Ryzen 5 5600 with the boxed cooler, activated xmp for ram with 3200 MHz and I see the temperature of CPU 96°C in stress test of Aida64. I think that is too much. What is wrong ?
Exactly like I wrote in another post, probably the RAM is heating up more because it's now overclocked -> so more heat in the case = higher CPU temps indirectly. Also maybe the CPU is now being utilized more as with faster RAM you have basically faster CPU (Ryzens are very dependant on RAM speed). This cooler is only suitable as emergency, not any serious work. How good is your case airflow? Cause OCing RAM can increase it's temps by 10°C easily and all that air is being sucked by the CPU cooler.
@@kovrcek Stock DDR4 ram with factory 3200 MHz you still have to turn on xmp for the motherboard to see the 3200 otherwise it keeps it at stock DDR4 speeds 2xxx
@@GoatzombieBubba op has activated xmp, read it again
also maybe he didn't use thermal paste on the cpu lol
A better test would have been a comparison of encoding times.
I want the 3060 but, considering the 1660 due to I won't use the RTX
The real question then becomes whether or not you can use the extra horsepower the 3060 has in traditional rendering over the 1660. Well, that and pricing obviously lol. Prices may be coming down, but they're definitely hit and miss right now.
If you don't care about ray tracing then go with an RX 6600 and save yourself money. It performs just as well as a 3060 until you turn ray tracing on.
Is it normal to run 85-90 C on normal use and 97 on gaming. I just setup my pc
No wtf bro
I use my 5600 with stock cooler. every game I play runs 60~73°C except Battlefield 5, as soons i open the game is goes to 83°, makes no sense, anybody know what coud be ? ty
It's fine, it's just that gaming ( even multi core heavy ones like BF5) isn't as heavy on all the threads so your cpu tries to boost a little more causing temps to be slightly higher than a full core load ( slower clocks) but still, if noise doesn't bother you 80c isn't gonna kill your cpu.
You can also try undervolting and save even 10c :)
for comparison, I used the old R5 1600 cooler I had and it works MUCH better than the r5 5600 one...
It's a shame AMD is going through the same intel route!
1600 got wraith spire, 5600 got wraith stealth, same as all r3 in 1st gen.😂
Don't mention Intel, their cooler straight to 🗑️
Is the Wraith Stealth enough to cool my 5600 to play games like Forza Horizon 5, God Of War, Red Dead Redemption 2, CS2, Rainbow Six Siege?
i have this cpu and i played every game u say, the temps will be around 80 to 85 some say its fine but temps around 70 will give u more performance and life time soo...
how do you get it to light up?
sorry dude but you were yapping too much. just show the results man