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Solve : Motherboard and CPU temps? |
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Answer» I have this case: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811147023&T Some boards have faulty sensors. The motherboard (system) temperature diode is under the battery near the Super I/O chip. Get a can of air and blow some over the battery. If you not see the temp immediately reduce then the sensor is not working. 58 is high; maybe the thermal grease on the northbridge is badly applied. If the board is new I would think about returning it since reapplying the grease might invalidate the warranty. I'll try that in a few minutes. And no it isn't new I've had this motherboard since June '09. I tried to blow the air as you said, but it's really hard to do so considering the location of the battery on the mobo. It was really really hard for me to get close to the the battery so I had to spray the air from about 3 inches away. It just happens to be in a bad location right under my Graphics card and right under the IDE port which im using. Anyway, I saw no temperature drop at all.Maximum operating temperature (°C) 55 - 74 Your temps seem normal to me. I think this is yours: http://www.cpu-world.com/CPUs/K10/AMD-Athlon%20II%20X2%20250%20-%20ADX250OCK23GQ%20%28ADX250OCGQBOX%29.html Quote from: Computer_Commando on August 06, 2010, 03:53:57 PM Maximum operating temperature (°C) 55 - 74 I'm more worried about the motherboard temp. Most motherboards idle at a much lower temp than 45C.Like Trout said, reapply thermal compound beneath the NB heat-sink. Make sure the heatsink is sitting on there nice and firmly (it may twist but shouldn't rock from side to side). If you have done all this and still see high temps, it is likely just a dodgy sensor. As long as you are not having system stability problems, I'd ignore it.Thanks, and that's really all I'm looking for, I'm not having any stability issues, and the heatsinks are not even hot to the touch so it probably is just a dodgy sensor. |
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