Raspberry Pi 3 - Idle/Load temperatures while running Retropie?
-
I used thermal heatsink glue, basically heatsink paste with epoxy already mixed in. Left overnight the heatsink is solid
I bought a big heatsink of eBay and cut it down to just fit over the main CPU leaving a little bit over overhand and also mounted a very small fan on top (superglued on but it did the job). Also the memory chip undernaeth is mounted on a heatsink as I'm led to belive that can get pretty hot when overclocking
These are the settings I used with an RPI3 :
#Overclock Settings
arm_freq=1350
over_voltage=6
sdram_freq=500
temp_limit=80
core_freq=500disable_splash=1
force_turbo=1
boot_delay=1#GPU Based
h264_freq=333
avoid_pwm_pll=1
gpu_mem=450
v3d_freq=525
gpu_freq=400#Ram Overclock
sdram_freq=575
sdram_schmoo=0x02000020
over_voltage_sdram_p=6
over_voltage_sdram_i=4
over_voltage_sdram_c=4Temperatures barely move over 45c regardless what heavy stress tests I used and left for a good 20-30 minutes testing it to the limits. With the fan off it climbs to about 10-15c more so the fan does make a difference. Its not in a case though as its mounted inside my desktop arcade cabinet
Maybe once I build a media player/KODI mounted in a case attacged to the back of our TV on a mount I might have to think differently
-
i used a heatsink with the included 'crappy tape', and it improved temps for me. i'm sure they're not as effective as a proper thermal adhesive, but i think there's some hyperbole about how they increase temps :) i think if it was this total thermal insulator, they'd wrap the space shuttle's hull with the stuff!
i remember back in the early 2000s when i was deep in the desktop PC overclocking community, we'd hear about people putting heatsinks on without removing the plastic backing of the tape, or applying a tablespoon of arctic silver all over their CPU, or not applying anything at all! so i treat anecdotes about this stuff with a pinch of salt...
-
So ... a rank newbie here. Howdy :)
I've done a bit of research on the thermal tape issue and it's important to note that there are at least two distinct types of thermal tape. The first is the kind that continues to adhere well at high temperatures but makes no attempt to transfer heat through the tape itself; the other is usually referred to as "thermal transfer tape" and is specifically designed for heatsink use. Many of the heatsink suppliers on eBay and other popular "modding" websites use the former and refer to it simply as "thermal tape." It's important to make sure that the tape used is thermally conductive, like 3M 8805.
FYI, I'm running my RPi 3B without a heatsink, in a fan-equipped enclosure. It's extremely quiet, and idle temperatures with ES running are 49C. Ambient room temperature is 25C. I'll have to set something up to monitor temps while I'm actually running some games, though.
Ok, so a couple of temps ... Sonic the Hedgehog via picodrive at 53C, Super Mario 64 via mupen64plus-gles2rice at 58C. Temps rose quickly at first, then leveled out and stayed fairly constant.
-
I use this case now, it solves all of my overheating issues. It's fanless and inexpensive. https://nostalgiatechs.com/heatsync-case-pi-amazon
-
Interestingly, while shutting down my system last night I noticed the high temp icon for the first time in over a year. Why? It was idling in Emulation Station on a theme that was playing a thumbnail video. This is something to keep in mind I guess–that the video playback may be more taxing on the CPU than playing a game. It was in my case, at least with the emu-movie it was playing (I don’t remember which arcade ROM I had highlighted).
-
@caver01 VLC or OMX Player?
VLC used to always lead me to the temperature icon after a while, which was one of the main drivers for me to push for alternatives, and so @fieldofcows put together a working prototype with OMX Player which solved that.
-
@pjft I guess I don’t know. I am familiar with both, but this was a result of the theme I am using. I am standing on the shoulders of giants here, benefiting from all of the fantastic work of @TMNTturtlguy and others, as I am using the 4:3 version of the Comics theme.
-
@caver01 Are you suggesting that you think the ComicBook Theme is causing your system to overheat? I do not think that that is possible! The theme and the video player are 2 separate things. Can you check what your video settings are set to in the start menu and report back.
Thanks
-
@tmntturtlguy All I am saying is that I wasn’t playing a video, but looking at the Arcade ROM list using your awesome theme while a thumbnail video was looping. I haven’t see the overheat icon for a year. As I shut down, I noticed the icon, but I wasn’t even in an emulator. It was just on the Arcade list, playing a small emu movie. I have been singing the praises of how a properly attached heat sink has worked so well on my Pi3 and thought it was relevant to mention an observational change in behavior.
Perhaps I should verify a few things before we jump to conclusions (sorry for the potential false alarm). When I get home later, I will open up the cabinet and inspect the sink, first and foremost. Heck, maybe it slid off! Then, I’ll play some Joust and let it sit a while at the emulator list and see what happens.
Start menu. . . Is this the options that come up when I press Player1 Start? I guess that would make sense. I will check and report back.
-
@caver01 Yes, the start menu is when you press player 1 start button. Depending on when you last updated ES, there is a video player option. Setting it to OMX player will increase the performance of the thumbnail video playback and reduce overheating. It is a well known and well documented issue that letting a video preview - your thumbnail video while in the game list view leads to overheating if the system is left to sit there looping the thumbnail while using the VLC player. OMX player fixes this issue. This issue occurs no matter what theme you use.
Another way to fix this is to be sure you have a screensaver set to either black or to random video. This will kill the thumbnail video looping and reduce temperatures. I would start with this before opening up your arcade cabinet. I am guessing haven't let your system just sit on a video thumbnail and let it loop very many times in the past, so this issue would not have been noticeable.
-
@caver01 you're likely in VLC if that's what you were doing.
Press Start and then go to... Other settings, I believe.
Enable OMX Player. Then you can pretty much leave it on on any video without any fear of overheating. Hopefully. :)
-
@tmntturtlguy @pjft Thanks! I am just starting to enjoy a few of the latest ES enhancements and obviously all of the gorgeous work on the updated themes. I know I haven’t touched any video settings at all, so I will take a look at that. It’s really an exciting time to be tinkering with RetroPie.
-
Well, I turned on the OMX Player and now most of me preview thumbnails don’t play at all, just black. The only ones that work are those that I transcoded manually to fix aspect ratio issues on them. I think my movies are all from emumovies.
Sorry to hijack the thread, but I guess using one video player over another can have an effect on CPU and heat, even in ES. That kinda brings it back to the OP.
-
@caver01 Just to finish the off topic then:
Yes, the video player you use will also influence the heat and performance. VLC is not hardware accelerated, so it will tax the CPU quite a bit. depending on the video resolution and frame rate, you may find that the videos don't quite run as well or as smooth as in other platforms. This will result in the CPU heating up quite a bit more than otherwise.
OMX Player is hardware accelerated, so it should run most videos - even at higher resolutions - quite smoothly and without taxing the CPU. This won't cause as much CPU heat.
That being said, it seems that it doesn't do well with some specific video encodings - I found that as well with some other videos.
My recommendation, if you'd have the patience and chance to, would be to run them all through Handbrake or something - even if using VLC, I'd recommend doing so and reducing them to a max resolution of 480x360@30fps for better performance with VLC.
Anyway, end of off topic.
-
@hobnob Late reply (since I'm new to RetroPie), but "me too."
Here is my kit.
The base of the case is quite warm and the little rubber feet that come with this kit were not raising the case far enough above the surface I was using (as part of the problem). I'll look for other solutions, but given the amount of heat at the touch, I believe the case is at least part of the issue. Heat sink adhesive is probably part of the issue, though I'm noting the recommendations to ditch the heat sinks altogether.
-
Going to try this case since the fan blows on the chips and allows exit below (though a side or back vent might be more efficient, but would dork with the case esthetics...).
https://www.etsy.com/listing/495376856/super-tinytendo-raspberry-pi-3-case?ref=related-1
-
@monkeydisco don’t give up on heat sinks. They can help a lot (they do in my setup). But use a thermal compound instead of mystery tape.
Contributions to the project are always appreciated, so if you would like to support us with a donation you can do so here.
Hosting provided by Mythic-Beasts. See the Hosting Information page for more information.