For Raspberry Pi4 continuous selfhosted server operations: with and without case fan. This graph show a 20°C decrease, with a slow rpm fan.
The metal case has thermal stickers to reach for main components on both sides, and the fan is what I have in scrap parts, totally not for that case but pushes a lot of air with low noise compared to screaming mini cpu fans.
TBF 0C and 0F are kinda arbitrary values.
0 F is defined as the lowest temperature a guy was able to reach with some random mixture which is arbitrary.
But 0 C is commonly defined as the point at which water turns from solid to liquid and the other way round. Scientifically it’s ever so slightly off but still it’s defined via Kelvin.
Celsius is defined at the arbitrary standard pressure, different pressure values change how water acts (this is very noticeable at 100C - boiling). Kelvin steps are defined from Celsius. Even the speed of light which is constant is still defined in terms of an arbitrary time unit.
@30p87 @bluGill @WolfLink @einkorn Wow wow guys… that’s just RRDTool doing its thing with graphs 😆
Seconds are clearly defined by one specific caesium-133 transition
Usually you’d measure it relative to room temperature. Probably harder in this scenario (I don’t have a thermometer laying around, but 20°C is probably a good starting point.
Esp. for CPU temps. A much more interesting range is 50-100C.