P.S. My AC68U runs at 86-90 degrees without cooling.
Since how long does it run like that Colin?
I know the Broadcom CPU's are rated for 120-130C max, but several years of sustained high temperatures like that might degrade the internal components (capacitors and such)?
Maybe it is not needed, but 65C with cooling gives me some peace of mind
It's been running like that since I bought it 1 month ago. I'm not worried about the temperatures as they are within spec.Since how long does it run like that Colin?
I know the Broadcom CPU's are rated for 120-130C max, but several years of sustained high temperatures like that might degrade the internal components (capacitors and such)?
Maybe it is not needed, but 65C with cooling gives me some peace of mind
@Chrysalis Sorry, I thought you were attaching a quiet PC fan to the case. My mistake.
There are many that have been running like that or warmer since introduction (3 years ago), or else we would have had a huge thread on it.
Many of my customers are slightly warmer and have been running for over 2 1/2 years without issues.
It depends on your local conditions.
Sitting in an air conditioned room or temperate climate, you can get away with running fanless.
Those of us living in subtropical or tropical climates find this model cooks itself.
At fanless temps of 100c+ (Idle) the CPU has very little head room. Work the CPU hard and lockups become inevitable.
Almost all fans available are spinning too fast.
The AC68U only needs gentle air flow to dramatically reduce its CPU temp to a reliable range.
Running a small 12v fan off a 5v the USB 2.0 connection is a simple neat all in one solution.
I understand.My reply was in regards to the mid 80's to low 90's. No issues.
The temps of the chip (as I'm stating them) is an absolute. Doesn't matter what the ambient temperatures are as long as the chip(s) are below 100C (as you note, too).
Running a fan may be simple, but it isn't 'neat', imo. And certainly nothing I would recommend to a customer (I'd be looking for different hardware for them first).
I disagree that ambient temps + workload don't matter. In my part of the world they clearly do. YMMV.
Respectfully, that has not been my experience.I never said that. I stated that all the units I have overseen that run up to the low 90's don't have issues.
Those Billions were great value for money back in the day. I see you are in Indonesia, I have units operating in Philippines & Northern Australia. Understand completely your decision to add auxiliary cooling.Speeds of RT-AC1900P (and AC68U) should be sufficient for at least the coming 5-10 years, so when I can prevent replacing it after 5 years I'll take the fans
Most manufacturers design electronics to last at least until the warranty is finished (MTTF) and they have no benefit to make it last for 10 years or longer. Adding a fan by the manufacturer would possible result in warranty claims because of failing ventilator's.
Until I bought this Asus 2.5 months ago, I was running a wired (10/100mbps) Billion Bipac 640SE router for over 10 years, so my AC1900P should be able to get close to that
Yes I am in Indonesia (natively Dutch) and during the day living room temperatures are around 30C year round here.Those Billions were great value for money back in the day. I see you are in Indonesia, I have units operating in Philippines & Northern Australia. Understand completely your decision to add auxiliary cooling.
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