Fixing The Best Selling Pre-Built Gaming PC On Newegg

**Improving System Temperatures: A Step-by-Step Guide**

In this video, we'll be exploring ways to improve the temperatures of our system while gaming, and taking it apart to see what can be done to further enhance those temperatures.

As you can see, the CPU was hitting a hundred degrees Celsius occasionally before, but now it's in the 60s. This is after just loading the game, so we're expecting even better results during actual gameplay.

Let's take a look at how well the system is doing after about 15 minutes of gaming. As you can see, everything should be thermally saturated by now, and indeed the temperatures haven't really been climbing.

We're averaging around low 60s for CPU temperatures, which is significantly cooler than the mid to high 80s we were in before. In terms of graphics card temperatures, it's still running pretty hot, but not much cooler than before.

However, those temperatures are looking way better so let's rip off the graphics card's cooler and see what we can do to help it out.

Oh look at that lonely little heat pipe! This really is a pretty sad cooler for an RTX 2016. And if you look around the front of the card, you can see that the fan shroud and backplate do block off quite a bit of airflow. For that cooler, that's definitely not going to help.

Now I was kind of thinking that I could just remove the plastic shroud with the fans attached to it and then strap like a 120 millimeter Noctua fan to the cooler, but as you can see, airflow wise that's not really going to work very well.

So let's just re-paste the cooler, see what difference that makes, and then we'll see if we can open up the front of the shroud and let some more air escape from that cooler. On first impressions, it looks like that re-paste was a great success, dropping two degrees Celsius. But the ambient temperature in the room was 2 degrees lower, so it didn't really help much.

But we can still try the shroud thing. And for the final test, I've just removed that stupid plastic backplate from the card and if you turn the graphics card around you can see that there's so much more room for hot air to escape that cooler, so yeah I think this should make a decent difference.

Finally, we have some decent temperatures on our graphics card, but the fact that just removing the backplate drops the graphics card temperature by 4 degrees Celsius is pretty rough. That's a terrible shroud design.

**Conclusion**

In conclusion, I'm actually kind of annoyed at how easy and inexpensive it was to fix the temperature problems on this system. They could have just shipped it with a better cooler, but that is one of the advantages of an SI system over an OEM system. They're much easier to upgrade – you can just replace the cooler with something decent and it fixes one of the fundamental problems of the system.

And then finally, in terms of stability, again after reinstalling Windows on the system, I didn't get a single crash or any form of instability, so that's pretty much been solved.

This brings me to the end of the video! So thank you very much for watching. If you enjoyed the video please do like and subscribe to the channel for more videos like this one, and until the next video, thank you for watching, bye!

WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enFor today's video, I'm gonna diagnose and fix the regular hard crashes while gaming that I've had  with this Newegg ABS system. And then after that I'm gonna go to an innocent little local pc shop,  to try and fix the 'hotter than a mild afternoon on venus' gaming temps that we've had with the  system. As cheaply as possible! but before that it's time for today's video sponsor.  Today's video is sponsored by the Elgato Wave 3 USB microphone, which I'm actually using to  record this audio. This is what it sounds like when I provocatively whisper into the microphone.  The microphone uses a premium condenser capsule, that picks up audio in a cardioid polar pattern.  The Elgato Wave 3 also has a physical volume gain knob right on the front of the microphone,  making it really easy to adjust your levels on the fly. The Elgato Wave 3 also has a capacitive mute  button right on the top of the microphone, so that you can shout at your neighbors mid-stream without  getting banned on Twitch. So considering the Wave 3's noob-friendly plug and play functionality,  mixed with its excellent audio quality. This is an amazing option for anybody who wants to  step up their audio game. Thank you very much Elgato Wave 3 for sponsoring today's video!Reinstalling windows. That is almost always my go-to first step to fix pretty much any problem  I run into in my day-to-day life. And this system is no different. So, the first thing that I did  when I came back into the office on Monday, was to make sure that Battlefield 5 was still hard  crashing to the desktop more regularly than it normally does. And, well yeah, it did. 15 minutes  into the first session, and the game would hard crash to the desktop. Subsequent sessions would  crash after about five or six minutes, which is actually the exact same behavior I saw last week  while initially testing the system. The first Battlefield 5 session after a cold boot of the  system would last the longest, and then subsequent gaming sessions would crash significantly more  regularly. This behavior made me think that it was a temperature-related issue, maybe the VRM was  overheating, but those temperatures weren't really alarming at this point. I reinstalled windows and  this is quite anti-climactic but that fixed it. That was it. It was a problematic Windows install,  which it almost always is with pre-built. After reinstalling windows I got 42 minutes into a  session of battlefield 5 without a single hard crash to the desktop. Which is more than twice  as long as I could get before. Battlefield 5 also didn't hard crash once in any of the subsequent  temperature testings I did with the cooling upgrade. So, yeah! Reinstalling windows fixed  it. So, the moral of the story here, is if you buy a pre-built, regardless if you have stability  issues or not, I would reinstall windows on that. Because it clears out all of the bloatware  and it makes the system feel a lot less like it's got Alma living in it. Oh yes, and on a quick  side note, in the comment section of the last video there was quite a lot of concern about the  memory configuration, and people were saying that that may be the reason for the stability issues.  While out of the box, the ram was clocked at 2666 megahertz with pretty loose timings,  they didn't enable any XMP profiles. But just to make sure, I did run mem test for about an hour  and 13 minutes without getting a single error, so the memory configuration seems to be fine.  But with that let's go to the local pc shop, buy some things and then try and fix those hideous  temperatures, which still persist after the windows reinstall, because obviously, they would.Okay, I am back from the local PC shop where I went looking for upgrades for our pre-built.  And considering that it's a small local PC shop, it's a bit like going vegetable shopping at a Beet  farm. Like, yeah, you're not going to have much of a choice. However, they did have one of these,  which is a hyper 212 led. A lot of you may be thinking, but Dawid, it is no longer 2014.  We shouldn't be excited about this cooler. But, the reason that we're excited about it is because  this is actually the best silent cooler on Newegg. Still. In 2021! And there was some interest in the  previous video to test the best-selling cooler in the best-selling system. So we can do that!  And then the other thing that I got, was was two fans. Very fancy! These aren't rgb,  they just have a static white led in them. Which is going to be problematic for color matching,  considering that the hyper 212 just has a static red led in it. But anyway, we'll worry about that  later. What I want to do with these two fans, is use them as intakes in the top of the case. Which  may be a bit controversial, but considering the fact that the front of that DeepCool case  chokes those intake fans so hard, I feel like I need to censor the footage of it. The top maybe  our best bet to get fresh air into this case. With that, let's try and fix our little ABS system.Okay, uh, as you can see. It was less an aesthetic pc Pimpin that we did,  than a thoroughly practical Pimpin. Which funnily enough was actually my pimp name back in the day.  But with that out the way, let's fire this up and see how much this helps the gaming tempts. Now,  unfortunately, we didn't directly do anything to the graphics card's cooler to help with its gaming  temperatures, but I'm hoping the fact that we've actually got some fresh air coming into the case  through the top, I'm hoping that that's enough to help its temperatures while gaming. But  after these tests, we'll take that graphics card apart and see what we can do to improve  those temperatures further. Oh, wow! Okay, so it's already way better while loading! Before, the CPU  would occasionally hit a hundred degrees celsius, and now it's in the 60s! So that's already so much  better. Okay, this is about 15 minutes into a gaming session. Considering that we're working  with air coolers, everything should be thermally saturated now and well the temperatures haven't  really been climbing. Look at how much better they are! We're averaging about in the low  60s in terms of CPU temperatures. Which is significantly cooler than the mid to high 80s  that we were in before. In terms of graphics card temperatures, it's still running pretty hot. It's  not much cooler than before but it's definitely better than playing jump rope with that 83  degrees celsius graphics card temperature barrier. In terms of gaming performance,  it shouldn't make much of a difference, but those temperatures are looking way better  so with that let's rip off the graphics card's cooler and see what we can do to help it out.Oh, look at that lonely little heat pipe. This really is a pretty sad cooler for an RTX 2016. And  if you look around the front of the card you can see that the fan shroud and the backplate  do block off quite a bit of airflow. For that cooler, that's definitely not going to help.  Now, I was kind of thinking that I can just remove the plastic shroud with the fans attached to it  and then strap like a 120 millimeter Noctua fan to the cooler, but as you can see,  airflow wise that's not really going to work very well. So, let's just re-paste the cooler,  see what difference that makes, and then we'll see if we can open up the front of the shroud  and let some more air escape from that cooler. Now, on first impressions, it looks like that  re-paste was a great success, dropping two degrees celsius. But the ambient temperature in the room  was 2 degrees lower, so it didn't really help much. But, we can still try the shroud thing.  And for the final test, I've just removed that stupid plastic backplate from the card  and if you turn the graphics card around you can see that there's so much more room  for hot air to escape that cooler, so yeah I think this should make a decent difference.  Finally, we have some decent temperatures on our graphics card, but the fact that just removing the  backplate drops the graphics card temperature by 4 degrees celsius is pretty rough. That's a terrible  shroud design. In conclusion, I'm actually kind of annoyed at how easy and inexpensive it was to  fix the temperature problems on this system. They could have just shipped it with a better cooler,  but that is one of the advantages of an SI system over an OEM system. They're much easier to upgrade  you can just replace the cooler with something decent and it fixes one of the  fundamental problems of the system. And then finally, in terms of stability, again after  reinstalling Windows on the system, I didn't get a single crash or any form of instability,  so That's pretty much been solved. This brings me to the end of the video! So,  thank you very much for watching. If you enjoyed the video please do like and subscribe to the  channel for more videos like this one, and until the next video, thank you for watching, bye!