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Jean-Mi

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  1. Hello Morphem, I'm answering in english because it is much more easy for me. To access the nvme slot on the back of the motherboard you can remove the graphic card, that may be easier than removing the motherboard entirely. I've already done it on the corsair I140 and it was quite easy especially if you are used to do work with electronic devices (I do it as hobbie). I'm not sure that this intervention will void the warranty. I already ask Corsair if I can upgrade my new i300 with an additional nvme and said yes, but I did'nt ask anything especially for the warranty. You can ask Corsair directly for this but I think it will be ok. The only thing in case of warranty issue you need to remove any additional parts you put in the system. Jean-Mi
  2. Thanks for the information about the video cart manufacturer. On the picture (in an other topic) the heat pipe should be on the memory chip and should transfert the heat to the cooler with the fan. That's why I was thinking the cooling configuration should follow this sensor and not other. Open question, that's mean do we need a mb bios or a gpu card bios update ? On the other hand I was looking to undervolt the CPU because I had some really short spike at 100°C on some core during gaming. After tweeking some parameters on the bios I keep now all core around 85°C. Next I will try to change the main fan that have better performances.
  3. Just to add my experience on this I just get my corsair one I300 several weeks ago, I check also the temps and the biggest concern is around the memory that is running hot (around 105°C). During my test I noticed that the small GPU fan start when the memory temp reach about 95°C and the GPU temp about 60 - 65°C. At full load and with a stable clock the temps stabilyze around: 105°C for the memory, 80°C the hot spot and 72°C for the GPU (with the cooling set on extreme). It seems that the cooling configuration is set to follow the GPU temp or the hot spot but it should be the memory. For this we need to wait on Corsair for a BIOS or ICUE update as mention by zguy85. I never encounter any overheating issue because I always run with a custom fan setting at least at 65% because or higher. On my previous A140 the SSD was always on the hot side with the default fan setting (I noticed this after the ssd died after 24 months). I hope Team Corsair will hear us and work on a fix soon.
  4. Hello, I opened a ticket with the Support Team to discuss this issue. But it is about 10 work days now that I don’t have any feedback. I tried to contact them via mail and opened a second ticket but the service remain silent. Can Someone help me on this matter? Thanks, Jean-Mi
  5. Hello Corsair Mint, Thanks for your reply, the ticket has been submitted. I hope I don't have to send the system back just for that. Best regards, Jean-Mi
  6. Hello, I bought last month a corsair one i140. After unpacking, I have got windows micro freeze issue, that was solve by updating the CG driver. Now I've some buzzing noise in my headset when I used the front panel combo jack. The weird thing, I have this issue only while playing game, when I alt+tab to return to desktop the buzzing stop. To narrow the problem, here the thing I already try and the result : Plug the headset on the rear panel => no buzzing Try another headset (called headset 2) with the combo jack => buzzing still present Try headset 2 with USB (I can used both on this one USB or combo jack) => no buzzing Try to update the audio driver from corsair web site but windows said it's already up to date => no modification still buzzing I'm short on idea on what to test next, so I hope that you could help me on this matter. Thanks a lot, Jean-Mi
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