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Very Hot Cpu
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#1
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Very Hot Cpu
[COLOR=Navy]W[/COLOR]
I seem to have everyone here beat with skyrocketing temps. First about my system (the relevant portions)-- Intel Pentium 4 3.2Ghz Intel D865Perl Motherboard 400 watt power supply with built in fan CPU fan and heatsink with paste Extra case fan Fresh air duct from side of case directly to CPU Two SATA hard drives one IDE. Two DVD drives Radeon 9700 Pro video card I dont typically run games and the system is not overclocked. I do run several office type programs at once. The computer is located under my desk but the front of the desk is wide open. There is a UPS and cable modem nearby. All measurement taken today were with the side cover off. The ambient room temperature ranged from 73-80 degrees F. I turned on the AC when the room started to get hot. I removed the side panel and blew out all the dust I could find. I downloaded and used SPEEDFAN. It measured the CPU at 63-76C, the three hard drives all at 44 and 55-56C the internal temp (whatever that is) at 38-39 and the remote temp (again, whatever that is) at 42-43. Also it said (i believe incorrectly) that one of my fans was turning at 29rpm and the other at 2700. I physically checked the fans and all are turning at what appears to be normal speed. Speed fan is indicating my CPU temp is in the Red zone. Later (the two programs will not run simultaneously), I downloaded and used Intels Desktop control center and got different values: CPU zone 64C, Zone A 36c Zone B 39C. One fan registered at 2700 rpm. Intel has the CPU temp in the yellow-red zone. I got still different (much higher) values when I checked temperatures using the BIOS CPU 93C, System 46 and 52C....checked another time and got CPU 89C, System 41 and 49C. The reason I started checking temps was my computer kept crashing but I have since determined that was a problem with CA EZ antivirus and not the hardware. Memtest86 showed no problems with memory and the computer ran 15 hours straight without crashing. While using CA EZ antivirus it was crashing every 2-4 hours and I could get it to crash if I had CA EX antivirus running and at the same time ran EVEREST (100% of the time) although EVEREST will run fine if the antivirus is turned off. My questions for all you gurus out there are: 1) Why do the different programs come up with different readings (aside from the obvious error of running them at different times) 2) What else can I do to cool things down short of an expensive water cooled system? 3) Are these temps normal or abnormal and are they way beyond the safe range (as indicated by looking at other peoples posts). Thanks for any input you can provide. |
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#2
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Hi jefrank...
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The BIOS will give you better readings than windows based utilities, but the BIOS does not stress the CPU, so you're not viewing the system under load. A physical temp probe is more accurate, but you can only place it against the heat spreader, and not the CPU die itself.. so even that isn't accurate either. Quote:
)an easy and cheap way to improve your temps would be to remove your heatsink > blow all the dust from the cooling fins > clean the heatsink and CPU with isopropyl alcohol to remove all the old thermal compound > once dried reapply the thermal compound (use arctic silver 5 for best performance). this process alone should improve your temps quite a bit (assuming you have sufficient case cooling). also, you say that the front of your case is in an open area, but what about the back of it? heat is exhusted from the back, and it needs to go somewhere. if your desk is trapping the exhusted heat then the buildup will keep your system hotter than you want it to be. also (again.. hehe ), youe PSU specs are "400watt PSU with built in fan". no offense but that sounds like it is a garbage generic power supply an may also be the cause if your PC crashes. (especially if it's running hot)
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#3
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ahh, i've got the same motherboard but with a 3.0E p4. i'm assuming yours is also a prescott core. i reccomend the zalman 7700cu cooler, but check first if your case has enough room. (www.zalman.co.kr) it weighs almost 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds), is very quiet, and can cool any processor.
in regards to your processor temp, temps above 65 degrees celsius are bad and constant operating at said temp will shorten the processor's operational life. at 80 degrees damage starts to occurr and the computer will malfunction. 76 is definitely pushing it. |
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#4
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Thanks for the input
Interesting, KingCody you say the bios gives better readings but does not stress the CPU, yet I got higher readings from the BIOS. that might mean that the true
temp while being stressed is even higher than monitoring with the bios. I may look into water cooling but not in the UK. Everything there is at least 50% more expensive. Can anyone recommend a decent cooling system available here in the US and give me an idea of what I should have to pay for the parts, and a source for it? What exactly is involved in the installation? Does it replace the CPU fan and heatsink or supplement them? I would like to hear from people running the P4 3.2ghz to see what temps they are experiencing with and without water cooling and what water cooler they are using (if any). Be sure to state how you measured it (bios or which program). I will try to remove the heatsink and fan, clean it and reinstall using the paste you recommend. Trouble is I unsnapped the two clips and tried to pull it free but it seems to be stuck. Is that just the paste holding it on? Should I just give it a good yank or am I taking a chance breaking it. I did my best to blow it out in place. As for the power supply I was just too lazy to look it up. It is a Macron MPT-400. Is that any good? Thanks for all the help. |
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#5
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P4 3.2 prescott cpu here, everest home reading 29`C with 6 IE windows open (yes i have firefox.. dont worry
) and few idleing background tasks.. on load its about 30-40 range, i never check it properly before.. so i forget. Bios about the same.only temp problem i have is on my main hdd, but its still quite below the threshold.. my setup involves 2x 80mm fans at the bottom front for intake, 1x 120mm side fan intake direclty on the mobo, 1x 80mm exaust on the back and the top of the case each. Stock cpu fan and heatsink, and havnt reapplied thermal stuff for a good year now, and someone did it for me since i was a noob at that stage, so i cant answer your yanking cpu question . Due for another dusting in about 2 months (in a 4 month cycle) but its winter here, so not much of a temp problem i guess.Lots of fans i know, but keeping it dust free, and using the fan power line from my PSU (except for the 120mm, which is connected directly to the mobo) makes it somewhat more silent.. Last edited by N3051M; 06-23-2006 at 01:43 PM.. Reason: Attachment |
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#6
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Thanks for the input. Mine is also a Prescott. Today, even though Im running a bunch of programs I am now down to a cpu temp of only 60 and my harddrives are down to 34-38 my aux is at 40 and my motherboard is at 37. The only difference is its cooler in the room today (although now I have the side panel on--I have been running the A/C all day). Here is my report.
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#7
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i would sugest in addition to cleaning the whole case (including the air filters on the fans) to tie up your cables to improve airflow.. and maybe add a few fans, with checking to the basic principles of airflow: front to back, sides in, bottom to top.
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#8
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Quote:
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)From my own personal experience in building several water cooling systems (even before you could buy commercial PC water cooling systems) I can tell you this much: 1. the design itself is your biggest factor, not the components themselves. for example where you place the pump is more important than what pump you use, how and where you mount the radiator is more important than what radiator you use... this is why i say it doesn't have to be expensive and the more that you can make yourself instead of buying a prebuilt part will save you even more money.
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) and few idleing background tasks.. on load its about 30-40 range, i never check it properly before.. so i forget. Bios about the same.
