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GWTechTalk
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Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 2 mal editiert, zuletzt von »GWTechTalk« (8. Juni 2026, 14:46)
Jacob
Full Member



螢幕擷取畫面 2026-06-11 222202 by Jacob Tien, 於 Flickr
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IMG_9239 by Jacob Tien, 於 FlickrDieser Beitrag wurde bereits 4 mal editiert, zuletzt von »Jacob« (11. Juni 2026, 17:00)
You can try changing the pump and fan control mode to PWM. The system will then adjust the speed according to the temperature and control settings.I used four calitemp temperature sensors, which were installed at the inlet and outlet of the CPU and GPU water blocks respectively, to sense the water temperature and control the speed of the water pump and fan.
{snip}
Since I have two D5 NEXT PUMPs, one driving the reservoir and the other driving the external radiator, I have two settings pages.The external radiator has three layers and uses a total of nine 140mm fans, controlled by three fan channels of the Aquaero XT_6. It also uses PWM mode to allow the calitemp water temperature sensor to control the fan speed.
GWTechTalk
Newbie

Remayz
Senior Member




it's toasty regardless just because of the hot IO die, the Vcache on top and the massive IHS. The water loop infuences it less that the Vcore does. All it will do is render your pump noisy if you don't add a massive hysteresis on the constantly fluctuating CPU temp.
You are forcing yourself into a flat fan or pump curve basically. you can achieve the same using a regular fan curve and leaving it set to flat.
it's custom loop for a reason, do it as you like!
GWTechTalk
Newbie

So, what I'm hearing is. "You took that hardest route possible to reach the goal." Classic me, I guess! A second profile does seem easier, but I'll have to look into that I don't know how to do that. Honestly everything at full bore is still almost 20 decibels lower than what I had for air cooling. 7900XTX too is a temp hog with the 500w firmware I put on it. I put two fireballs in my system. My idle temps for the GPU are lower than that of the CPU when not gaming. 7900XTX loves the water im giving it. I have a 15% overclock on the card and it doesn't miss a beat.A few notes from what i saw, in no particular order![]()
for the fans, 5% PWM difference is basically the same. even on your screenshots you can see they spin at the same speed. Most fans have a wide margin for max speed tolerance from the factory like +-10%.
Since you have 3 intakes obstructed by a radiator, and 4 free exhausts, there's nothing to do really, it's already naturally negative pressure.
With a 5800 X3D, i wouldn't bother either about controlling anything with CPU temperatureit's toasty regardless just because of the hot IO die, the Vcache on top and the massive IHS. The water loop infuences it less that the Vcore does. All it will do is render your pump noisy if you don't add a massive hysteresis on the constantly fluctuating CPU temp.
For your fan and pump control with input offsets, it's a bit oddYou are forcing yourself into a flat fan or pump curve basically. you can achieve the same using a regular fan curve and leaving it set to flat.
Instead of setting the output % manually and controlling the offset, you can set the % with a fan curve and manually control the offset, leaving you the option to have a non linear output with a curved... curve. Since you have a single radiator for a X3D CPU + a 7900XTX, it may help as the CPU will always have a wiuldly fluctuating temperature that you may want to filter out with a flatter low end of the curve, and the GPU will run the water fairly warm under load with a single radiator.
Finally for emergency cooling, you can simply use the bbuilt in profile switching of profiles on Aquasuite. Just set the switching to your sensor of choice, and if say the temperature exceeds a certain threshold, it'll go to a whole other profile with more agressive cooling, until the temperature is under control.
Edit : i forgot to add, that's just my 2 centsit's custom loop for a reason, do it as you like!
Jacob
Full Member



You can try changing the pump and fan control mode to PWM. The system will then adjust the speed according to the temperature and control settings.I used four calitemp temperature sensors, which were installed at the inlet and outlet of the CPU and GPU water blocks respectively, to sense the water temperature and control the speed of the water pump and fan.
{snip}
Since I have two D5 NEXT PUMPs, one driving the reservoir and the other driving the external radiator, I have two settings pages.The external radiator has three layers and uses a total of nine 140mm fans, controlled by three fan channels of the Aquaero XT_6. It also uses PWM mode to allow the calitemp water temperature sensor to control the fan speed.
A few thoughts.
One does not arbitrarily decide to use PWM or power to control a fan/pump motor, the motor is designed for one or the other, with PWM being the preferred method due to efficiency.
It is useful to monitor the CPU/GPU temps for knowledge, but not for controlling the fans... the system will have ramped up the fans three or four times before the coolant ever gets to the radiator.
Speedy-VI's post above covers why, generally, not to control pump speed with delta temperatures.
As the fans are only able to affect the coolant temperature while IN the radiator, the delta temperature between the radiator out port, and the ambient room, gives a useful indication of how well the system is controlling temperature, and it is also self regulating for room temperature fluctuations. Lastly, it is important the ambient sensor be far away from the system itself, so as not to be biased by the system temperature (i.e. do NOT place at or near a radiator)
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