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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
Check the link below and see if your board is listed.
Then you can find out which sensors are relevant to your board. mbm Some of the readings are unnecessary and can be ignored......you will know which are the correct ones when you compare the options listed. You should be in the 25-35c range for the board 35-50c range for the cpu.......... These are very rough guesstimates as the are so many variables. Let us know what board you have........nforce2? |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
I know that my cpu model can have a max temp of 85C, so having 65C is ok, barely. I'm skimming on borderline. I have an ASUSTeK A7N8X-LA motherboard... was I too specific... lol. I've tried MBM, but I don't like it. Do you know of any other programs that monitor the cpu temp, along with other things?
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
well
I didnt found my motherboard it the link you did give me, I have Albatron KT400A-8235 but i didn't found what sensors do i need to mention... |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
Hello Anton the AIDS Fighter,
Here is a quote from the Speedfan site: The hardware manufacturers connect available pins to different temperature sensors basically according to the physical placement of components on the motherboard. This means that the same chip, an ITE IT8712F, for example, might be connected to a sensor diode measuring CPU temperature on Temp2 and, on a different hardware, it might be connected on Temp1. It is not certain that the other temperature sensors are even hooked up. SpeedFan gives you the chip values without any motherboard information, such as whether or not more temperature sensors are hooke to the device monitor chip. The other temperature values may just be floating, with only your CPU temperature meaning anything. You will have to search your motherboard manufacturer site to see if there really are any other temperature sensors. 54C is a good CPU temperature that should not cause any worries. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
Im an old Net Admin with years of experience with AMD specifically. You dont need Loads od fans, coz all that might do is create more hot air. What you need is the stock cooler that the CPU came with, and a case that has the power supply rotated 90 degrees. When the PSU is rotated 90 degrees, the intake air is right above the cpu fan, and than it sux the air right out.Otherwise, THe hot air is than not just blown into hte case to circulate in circles, if it does just circulate in circles, any cool air you intake just gets trapped in a cyle and gets hotter. Hence the 79 degree temps. And lots of fans might not get the circulation you reauire. So, take great care in visualizing the air dynamics of any case you buy, coz when you get your cpu temp down to about 40, that mmachinw will fly! mine is benchmared to be 50% faster than a p4 3.5 GhZ and I dont over clock, just a really good case to keep the temp down
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