What's new
Guest viewing limit reached
  • You have reached the maximum number of guest views allowed
  • Please register below to remove this limitation
  • Already a member? Click here to login

CPU temp

Prox

Part Of The Furniture
PF Member
Messages
3,107
Highlights
0
Reaction score
0
Points
402
Peak Coin
0.000000¢
DB Transfer
0.000000¢
What is the best way to check the temp that your cpu is running at at full capacity. I keep wanting to check on it to make sure that it is doing alright with the Folding@Home thing, but I dont know anyway other then through the BIOS. Anyhelp would be good.
smile.gif


------------------
Mother Should I Trust The Government - Pink Floyd

Everything under the sun is in tune but the sun is eclipsed by the moon - Pink Floyd

Those times I burned my guitar it was like a sacrafice. You sacrafice the things you love. I love my guitar - Jimi Hendrix
 
Provided your motherboard is supported, I've found no better method than Motherboard Monitor 5. Aside from the fact that this great program can monitor just about anything your BIOS will output from a sensor into a Windows app, it's FREEWARE!!!
smile.gif

http://mbm.livewiredev.com/


------------------
Alien Soup Folding@Home Team Leader

Are <u>You</u> Folding@Home for Team Alien Soup?

(`'·.¸(`'·.¸ ~ ¸.·'´)¸.·'´)
«´·.¸¸ Diesel Dan ¸¸.·`»
(¸.·'´(¸.·'´ ~ `'·.¸)`'·.¸)
 
Thanks Dan. Works so far . .. so what should it be running at . . . and should i look at farinhite or celcius.

------------------
Mother Should I Trust The Government - Pink Floyd

Everything under the sun is in tune but the sun is eclipsed by the moon - Pink Floyd

Those times I burned my guitar it was like a sacrafice. You sacrafice the things you love. I love my guitar - Jimi Hendrix
 
It depends on your CPU type (Intel/AMD), speed (higher speeds generally run hotter), etc.

As for F/C readings, whatever floats your boat.
smile.gif


As discussed in another thread, my T-bird 1000@1100 is currently running between 38C and 41C, with the case temp being a constant 23C.

Personally, I like to use Celsius because it's slighty steadier than Farenheit. While my CPU says 38C, that could range from 99-103F or so. It's just easier to use Celsius when trying to get a baseline reading, for me at least.

------------------
Alien Soup Folding@Home Team Leader

Are <u>You</u> Folding@Home for Team Alien Soup?

(`'·.¸(`'·.¸ ~ ¸.·'´)¸.·'´)
«´·.¸¸ Diesel Dan ¸¸.·`»
(¸.·'´(¸.·'´ ~ `'·.¸)`'·.¸)
 
Ok for some reason it has decided to say that it is running at 0 degrees C . . . for some reason I dont think this is right. Is there anything I need to do to make this work better . .. or is it just not liking my mobo. oh yeah . . . once again as a reminder . . . abit kt7a mobo and durron 800 processor. just incase that matters.

------------------
Mother Should I Trust The Government - Pink Floyd

Everything under the sun is in tune but the sun is eclipsed by the moon - Pink Floyd

Those times I burned my guitar it was like a sacrafice. You sacrafice the things you love. I love my guitar - Jimi Hendrix
 
Prox&gt; Go to the MBM website, and on the bottom left, there is a motherboard links section. Click on Abit, and check the sensors for the KT7A. Make sure those sensors are the ones you have set in the program, or it will return the incorrect readings.


------------------
Alien Soup Folding@Home Team Leader

Are <u>You</u> Folding@Home for Team Alien Soup?

(`'·.¸(`'·.¸ ~ ¸.·'´)¸.·'´)
«´·.¸¸ Diesel Dan ¸¸.·`»
(¸.·'´(¸.·'´ ~ `'·.¸)`'·.¸)
 
Back
Top