Motherboard & CPU Temperatures-Question

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  • Westly32
    Super Member
    Super Member
    • Jun 2006
    • 276

    Motherboard & CPU Temperatures-Question

    I used a program called EVEREST Home Edition, which I found here to look at my pc's specs. And I noticed the temperature that it came back for the motherboard and cpu, and was taken aback. I don't know if it's normal or not. I realize any electronic equipment that's on for several hours will run hot, but...

    <table width="100%"> <tbody> <tr> <td class="pt">Sensor </td></tr><tr> <td> <hr> </td></tr></tbody></table> <table> <tbody> <tr> <td width="16"> </td><td width="16">
    </td><td width="16">
    </td><td width="16">
    </td><td width="16">
    </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td colspan="3">Sensor Properties: </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>Sensor Type </td><td>SMSC LPC47M192/997 (SMBus 2Dh) </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>Motherboard Name </td><td>MSI MS-7093 </td></tr><tr> <td> </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td colspan="3">Temperatures: </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>Motherboard </td><td>48 °C (118 °F) </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>CPU </td><td>43 °C (109 °F) </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>WDC WD2500JS-60MHB1 </td><td>68 °C (154 °F) </td></tr><tr> <td> </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td colspan="3">Cooling Fans: </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>CPU </td><td>953 RPM </td></tr><tr> <td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>
    </td><td>Chassis </td><td>1707 RPM </td></tr></tbody></table>
    So, are these temps the norm for a pc?
  • Chewy
    Super Moderator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18971

    #2
    I would jury rig a fan onto that northbridge chipset heat sink, that temp for the hard drive is way too high, might have to add a case fan?

    Comment

    • Westly32
      Super Member
      Super Member
      • Jun 2006
      • 276

      #3
      I was afraid that was just to high a reading. I haven't had any problems-that I know of, pc performance wise. (stupid question) Having 2 fans in a pc won't make it run hotter or use even more power? Arrgh!

      Comment

      • Chewy
        Super Moderator
        • Nov 2003
        • 18971

        #4
        keep the computer cleaned out, make sure the case gets plenty of cool air

        Comment

        • ipaulo
          Super Member
          Super Member
          • Apr 2006
          • 291

          #5
          This might make a good sticky. What would be exceptable temperatures? Please tell me if I'm ok with these temp. Thanks
          Attached Files

          Comment

          • Chewy
            Super Moderator
            • Nov 2003
            • 18971

            #6


            watch each individual core's temp under load

            Comment

            • katzdvd
              Lord of Digital Video
              Lord of Digital Video
              • Feb 2006
              • 2198

              #7
              Hi Westly32,

              I commend you for taking the time & interest to check the temps; Just curious. What is your ambient room temp? Are you air conditioned?

              I have a family member who lives in a 90 degree + apartment, runs his pc night & day chugging thru heavy/audio editing, & wonders why his parts are always frying. I tried to turn him on to Everest in the beginning, but he wouldn't listen, so I just smile to myself when he calls me about his pc not booting, & it turns out he needs a new mainboard/hard drive, etc.

              He's been thru many, many "forced" upgrades, lol!

              Course, this is the guy with a 4 yr. old DVD burner who refuses to update the firmware, burning away happily with KHypermedia....

              I guess ignorance is bliss, but sometimes expensive!

              My favorite thing to tell him lately is "go to google & use the search function!"

              Comment

              • ipaulo
                Super Member
                Super Member
                • Apr 2006
                • 291

                #8
                Thanks Chewy. Which one do you think is the correct reading? The Everest is about 10C lower than Core Temps. Also do you think I'm in a safe range. When I run DVDRebuilder in Idle (low) priority the temps go up a few Cs.
                Attached Files
                Last edited by ipaulo; 31 Jul 2007, 09:10 AM.

                Comment

                • Chewy
                  Super Moderator
                  • Nov 2003
                  • 18971

                  #9
                  core temp show higher readings for a reason, it's reporting the truer/on die?
                  temp, now check right after bootup, then after idle/short use, then very carefully bring all four cores up for a while where the average use is at least 60-70%, if it gets close to 60C then back off the load

                  capture a screenshot during that load please

                  and don't even consider overclocking that monster
                  Last edited by Chewy; 31 Jul 2007, 09:21 AM.

                  Comment

                  • Westly32
                    Super Member
                    Super Member
                    • Jun 2006
                    • 276

                    #10
                    Originally Posted by katzdvd
                    Hi Westly32,

                    I commend you for taking the time & interest to check the temps; Just curious. What is your ambient room temp? Are you air conditioned?
                    I read about Everest here in a thread, and simply decided to d/l it...I wasn't specifically looking to see the cpu temp.
                    I guess ignorance is bliss, but sometimes expensive!
                    You got that right. I wish I hadn't, cause I've spent the last few days wondering why it's so high. Despite the central air running constantly...

                    Comment

                    • katzdvd
                      Lord of Digital Video
                      Lord of Digital Video
                      • Feb 2006
                      • 2198

                      #11
                      You got that right. I wish I hadn't, cause I've spent the last few days wondering why it's so high. Despite the central air running constantly...
                      Well, better to uncover a potential problem now, instead of when the pc melts down & you lose all your critical data! (esp. the stuff you haven't backed up)

                      Comment

                      • Chewy
                        Super Moderator
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 18971

                        #12
                        I just got verification that the new everest V4 reports the kernel temp exactly
                        like core temp

                        Comment

                        • MilesAhead
                          Eclectician
                          • Nov 2006
                          • 2615

                          #13
                          smokin'

                          Originally Posted by Westly32
                          I was afraid that was just to high a reading. I haven't had any problems-that I know of, pc performance wise. (stupid question) Having 2 fans in a pc won't make it run hotter or use even more power? Arrgh!
                          Hmmm according to Western Digital specs the drive operating temp
                          likes 5°C to 55°C (41°F to 131°F)

                          I'm surprised it hasn't shut down or produced CRC errors. Either that
                          or your sensor is defective.

                          Does your PC have any options to adjust fan speed via the BIOS?
                          If so I'd try bumpin' 'em up and see if it shows cooler running. If
                          the temp doesn't change maybe the thermometer is broken.

                          Comment

                          • Westly32
                            Super Member
                            Super Member
                            • Jun 2006
                            • 276

                            #14
                            Originally Posted by MilesAhead

                            Does your PC have any options to adjust fan speed via the BIOS?
                            If so I'd try bumpin' 'em up and see if it shows cooler running. If
                            the temp doesn't change maybe the thermometer is broken.
                            Looked in BIOS for anything fan related, and didn't see anything listed. I'm not tech savy enough to dig into it beyond the menu screens that were listed, and risk mis setting anything.
                            I did open the tower this morning to clean it out. The fans-one on the motherboard, one in the power supply case, and a 3rd underneath it were remarkably clean, only a very fine layer of dust (barely noticeable-I had to get a flashlight to actually see it) plus a few tiny dust bunnies on the floor of the case The pc is just over a year old.
                            So, I'll stop worrying... for now.

                            Comment

                            • MilesAhead
                              Eclectician
                              • Nov 2006
                              • 2615

                              #15
                              Might check web site

                              Originally Posted by Westly32
                              Looked in BIOS for anything fan related, and didn't see anything listed. I'm not tech savy enough to dig into it beyond the menu screens that were listed, and risk mis setting anything.
                              I did open the tower this morning to clean it out. The fans-one on the motherboard, one in the power supply case, and a 3rd underneath it were remarkably clean, only a very fine layer of dust (barely noticeable-I had to get a flashlight to actually see it) plus a few tiny dust bunnies on the floor of the case The pc is just over a year old.
                              So, I'll stop worrying... for now.
                              My new AMD machine has no user-controlled fan settings AFAIK but my last 2 PCs were HP Pavilion with Pentium D CPUs. The regular boot up BIOS screens didn't have any way to set the fan speeds but on the HP help forums I found out that there was an "undocumented" BIOS screen that would come up if you pressed F11 during boot. This screen let you set fan voltages and temperature thresholds. Occasionally these PCs were locking up because as I found out, the threshold for bumping up the fan speed was set at 69 C and this CPU issues a Halt instruction at 70 C. Before the fans could even speed up, my PC would lock up!!

                              It may be worth checking out your manufacturer's web site to see if there's a support forum. The fact that there's nearly no dust may just indicate that the fans aren't turning fast enough to create a vacuum!!

                              OTOH if you're not getting errors I can appreciate the "if it ain't broke" philosphy. CPUs may protect themselves with a Halt instruction but I'm not sure what safety features are built into Hard Drives. Good luck with it.

                              Comment

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