RTX space heating

One thing that I’ve learned with being cooped up by this hamstring, is Rimuru makes a superb space heater. A while back, I bought a small sensor wanting to get an idea of the humidity in the study, since sometimes it gets rather warm.

Rimuru’s waste heat when pumping out the 4070 Ti is actually enough to significantly raise the temperature in here. After a long gaming session the study’s temperature can climb as as high as 26 C versus 21 C across the house where my thermostat is located. Or roughly, play video games long enough and the temperature rises about 10 degrees Fahrenheit. Enough that opening the window is more effective than mucking with the thermostat, but then that dries things out on the humidity front. It’s quite an effective space heater when outputting 2160p, but fortunately that’s predominantly waste heat rather than internal. It’s got great cooling, the problem is the place it sends that heat is outside the case ;).

By contrast while the study TV likely has a larger amount of waste heat than the monitor at my desk, Steam Deck event when combined with its dock and an external hard drive, doesn’t really seem to affect the temperature in here at all. Considering the machine would probably become a hand grenade or a pot of thermite if it generated as much heat as the RTX card, that’s not too shabby. It’s more of a 720p/low than 4K/high on more modern games since the APU’s more like an Xbox One, but Steam Deck is actually quite capable for what it’s able to actually run. Plus for older games like MGS:V that were developed around the XB1 era, it can basically pump those out at 720p with max graphics.

So, I think in the future I may want to consider a wee bit more about how to ventilate Rimuru’s place in the study, or perhaps just angle its asshole towards the open door instead of the wall.

And then there’s the fact that without hamstring trouble, I’d actually like to get up and walk around more often \o/ \o/ \o/.