Hi everyone, appreciate some assistance here. My CPU has hit 100 degrees celcius and shut down. This was happening when the CPU load was 1% with nothing running. I have ran a virus scan (both Defender and Malwarebytes) and nothing there. I have also changed the thermal paste, cleaned the fans and made sure the CPU cooler was secured properly.

This has happened randomly before, then all of a sudden it’s running fine again and sits between 40c - 60c for months. It seems to be a completely random event then goes back to normal. It occurs maybe twice a year.

This is what I have:

Gigabyte B650 Gamxing X MSI GeForce RTX 3060 AMD Ryzen 7 7700X EK AIO 240 D-RGB be quiet! Pure Power 11 Gold Modular 750W Power Supply

Anything else I can look for? Appreciate it.

Update: I’ve ended up applying for warranty for the cooler. I have tried all that has been suggested. For now, I’ve bought a Noctua NH-U9S cpu fan. If that works, I’ll probably just leave it in there.

Thanks again for helping a confused noob girl out. Love this community!

Update 2: I’ve taken out the AIO cooler and replaced with a fan (Noctua NH-U95). The temperatures are fine now. I was a little worried at first as the temperatures were better but high (70-80c under 10% load). Switched off the PC, now it’s back on and it’s staying around 43c. It’s seems some fresh thermal pastes might take a while to settle in. Thanks again everyone. Never buying water-cooling again.

  • @BluescreenOfDeath
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    37 days ago

    I don’t disagree that you’re finding issues. But I’m not convinced these would cause a CPU to overheat at idle.

    They might cause issues with temps under full load, but I think his main issue is the watercooler isn’t moving heat from the CPU block to the radiator.

    • @PriorityMotif
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      26 days ago

      It’s not going to dissipate any heat if it’s not touching the CPU. It looks like it’s making good thermal paste spread because he’s pushing the block down, but then tightening down it’s probably lifting up one of the corners or entire side.

      • @werefreeatlast
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        35 days ago

        I totally agree with this. If the CPU lifts even a tiny bit, it doesn’t mater what thermal compound you use, the conductivity of it is total shit compared to even tin can solid metal. So any lift will cause overheating.