Fixing AMD Navi overheating/junction temp. issues 26 January 2023, 12:07:50 So I have an RX 5500 XT bought for really cheap from a guy, who told me was in excellent condition (and it was, never opened even), but soon I find it is plagued with the junction temp. issue.Of course i try repasting it, gpu temp lowers by like 1 degree, and junction temp. from 110 to 105, still too much.Next I try as a test to replace part of the thermal pads and also supplement some (on my card there are 2 more chips almost touching the cooler near the gpu, and another two almost touching the backplate; you have to take apart the whole card). After this, what a surprise, the juction temp lowers from 105 to ~98. Which is still too much as the fans start screaming at 99.The third time I open the card I decide to also change the thermal pads on the memory chips, and on half of the VRMs as they looked squashed. For extra measure i smear some thermal paste on them too.When I close the card I also notice how some thermal pads don't make good contact at the very top. Pressing the card with my hands proved it: the screws holding the fan assembly (which also hold the edges of the cooler itself) have some springs on them, which limits their torque.I put some thin washers behind them to increase that torque, closed the card back up, and to my delight: GPU barely touches 60, and junction barely touches 80.So what's going on with Navi cards? The mounting is improperly designed - GPU bracket has tiny little screws, then the "support" for it, which is this weird fan assy.+edge of cooler contraption, has too little torque.My card is a Sapphire Pulse, close to reference. I've seen the high end cards e.g. 6800XT also plagued by this, to look similar in their mouting system. 1 Likes
Re: Fixing AMD Navi overheating/junction temp. issues Reply #1 – 17 April 2023, 00:13:12 I've opened my card again recently since I had to retrieve a screw from inside of it, goofy me had to clean the dusty pc. Next to the gpu chip, at least on my Sapphire card, there is this hard rubber spacer. I think it's meant to protect the chip in case the cooler gets a bump. Well I took it off (you'll need some solvent, it's very well glued) and it seems to be a few more degrees off the junction temperature, from a best of 80, now to the high 70's.Seems to be another viable solution, unfortunately there still is no permanent fix apart from a cooler redesign. Heh or a custom cooler, if there is one for the lower end cards like mine. Last Edit: 18 April 2023, 22:02:47 by Hitman