Any tip is appreciated! Oh, and in case you're wondering why the bottom fans have no lighting, the fan controller only has 6 headers and I had to plug the other 2 into the motherboard. I know that they're not the top of the line by any means, but overall they're doing a relatively good job, enough for my standards. Worth mentioning that the fans are HP Corona RGB fans with 6 of them being 120mm and 2 of them (the top exhausts) being 140mm. I have seen in general split opinions with negative pressure over positive pressure and vice-versa, but speaking temperature-wise, I'd like to know if this is the best solution or if there's anything else I can try. All of this is in a case that has 8 fans, 5 for intake and 3 for exhaust (as the picture below will show it). Given the information above, the GPU and CPU in question are a Palit Windforce 1080ti and an i5-9600K GHz being cooled by a Dark Rock 4. However, the temperatures are worrying me nonetheless. I know that CPUs nowadays are meant to be safe even at those temperatures and if anything, it'll throttle to stop any damage being done to it. The GPU temps seem not to matter whether the CPU is or is not under load, as it will stay at around 69-71 degrees either way, but when the GPU is under load, the CPU can jump from 80-81 degrees with GPU idling to 89-91 degrees when GPU is under load (doesn't thermal throttle). After looking in MSI Afterburner, the temps were showing 70-71 degrees for the GPU and 89-90 for the CPU. Hello! After folding at home while working, the heat radiating from the PC was kind of unbearable, especially when both the CPU and GPU were completing a job.
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