Temperature behavior
The usual course of Cinebench R23 Loop and the gaming test with Borderlands 3 was again used to evaluate the thermal behavior. But I’m already sure that we won’t see any flames today.
General conditions
Room: 19.8°C
Case: 500 rpm
CPU: 1000 rpm
Test system
There have been a number of small changes to the test system used recently. The usually used kfa² RTX 3070 Ti SG was replaced by a Sapphire RX 7700XT Pure. The 7700XT is faster than the 3070 Ti in most games and tests and consumes 50-70W less on average, without any manual optimizations. Instead of an AIO, a large air cooler was used again here because it fitted in well with the overall look.
CPU Torture
In the Cinebench R23 loop, the thick DeepCool cooler was able to keep the CPU at around 81°C on average, with a stable clock of 4000MHz. In the recently tested DeepCool CH 560, the CPU temperature – with the same cooler – was 1K lower, although the room was 1K warmer.
Gaming
Borderlands 3 was used again for the gaming test. The UE4 game demands everything from the graphics card and also gives the CPU a lot to do. The 7700XT Pure is on average 10K cooler than the GeForce usually used and is also considerably quieter. Only the coil whirring indicates that a powerful graphics card is installed. With hot-spot temperatures of around 84°C, the GPU was also approx. 2K above the results of the DeepCool CH 560.
In the gaming test, the CPU climbed up to approx. 60°C and was thus already significantly (5 Kelvin) above the measured values in the DeepCool CH 560. Still within the green range, but clearly behind comparable cases.
Interim conclusion
Overall, the CUT 593 cuts a rather average figure in terms of temperatures. Compared to similarly priced competitor products, FSP’s first product falls slightly behind, but this does not mean that it is a total thermal failure. It would certainly be possible to increase the speed of the pre-installed case fans by one or two degrees, but then the pleasantly quiet fans would quickly turn into hissing dragons – and that’s something you want to avoid. The non-PWM-controlled fans have shone up to approx. 500rpm with pleasantly quiet background noise and pleasingly few “bearing/running noises” and still moved enough air to easily avoid an acute heat build-up in the case.
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