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cpu temp
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Post cpu temp 
"Nathan McNulty" <nospam.DeleteThis@msn.com> wrote in message
news:esLxSsxiEHA.1644@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
> http://www.intel.com/design/Pentium4/guides/30056401.pdf
>
> According to the whitepapers, the maximum temperature is 85C, but this is
> the max temperature it can run at for 15 minutes. Either way, this is
> exremely high, but I bet for a few seconds it can go higher than 85C (but
> not much).

and definitely not an extra 10°C above max, a fully-stressed Prescott
running for more than 15mins will top-out at just over 75°C, i very much
doubt that it would survive a 20° increase to 95°C, the internal regulator
circuitry would slow-down the clock frequency and/or reduce the voltage to
prevent permanent damage
--
francis

>
>
>
> ----
> Nathan McNulty
>
>
> francis gérard wrote:
>> "Cari (MS MVP)" <Newsgroups1.DeleteThis@coribright.com> wrote in message
>> news:%23v0727wiEHA.3632@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>
>>>A Prescott will shut down at 95°C, a Northwood CPU will shut down much
>>>earlier. I've NEVER seen an AthlonXP run that hot.
>>
>>
>> 95°C = 203°F (a few degrees below the boiling point of H˛O)
>>
>> that seems incredibly hot, are you sure about that?
>>
>> a Prescott CPU running at full load usually doesn't get any hotter than
>> 60°C (140°F), i think it would shutdown long before it reached 95°C
>>
>> --
>> francis

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Post cpu temp 
"Nathan McNulty" <nospam.TakeThisOut@msn.com> wrote in message
news:esLxSsxiEHA.1644@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
> http://www.intel.com/design/Pentium4/guides/30056401.pdf
>
> According to the whitepapers, the maximum temperature is 85C, but this is
> the max temperature it can run at for 15 minutes. Either way, this is
> exremely high, but I bet for a few seconds it can go higher than 85C (but
> not much).

and definitely not an extra 10°C above max, a fully-stressed Prescott
running for more than 15mins will top-out at just over 75°C, i very much
doubt that it would survive a 20° increase to 95°C, the internal regulator
circuitry would slow-down the clock frequency and/or reduce the voltage to
prevent permanent damage
--
francis

>
>
>
> ----
> Nathan McNulty
>
>
> francis gérard wrote:
>> "Cari (MS MVP)" <Newsgroups1.TakeThisOut@coribright.com> wrote in message
>> news:%23v0727wiEHA.3632@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>
>>>A Prescott will shut down at 95°C, a Northwood CPU will shut down much
>>>earlier. I've NEVER seen an AthlonXP run that hot.
>>
>>
>> 95°C = 203°F (a few degrees below the boiling point of H˛O)
>>
>> that seems incredibly hot, are you sure about that?
>>
>> a Prescott CPU running at full load usually doesn't get any hotter than
>> 60°C (140°F), i think it would shutdown long before it reached 95°C
>>
>> --
>> francis

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Post cpu temp 
"Miss Perspicacia Tick" <misstick.RemoveThis@lancre.dw> wrote in message
news:EI9Xc.33445$Dz3.13800@fe48.usenetserver.com...
> Andrew E. wrote:
>> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
>> F
>
> 30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do

operating temperature refers to the ambient temperature of the environment
in which the cpu is operating... not the core temperature of the cpu itself,
which in most cases will be significantly higher than ambient temperature of
the machine's enclosure.

> learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
> temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
> Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.

you silly amerikans still using those darn imperial units down there? tsk
tsk ;->

--
francis

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Post cpu temp 
Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp

--
Good Day
Haus



"francis gérard" <spam DeleteThis @spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:e3v0oCwiEHA.3876@TK2MSFTNGP15.phx.gbl...
>
> "Miss Perspicacia Tick" <misstick DeleteThis @lancre.dw> wrote in message
> news:EI9Xc.33445$Dz3.13800@fe48.usenetserver.com...
>> Andrew E. wrote:
>>> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
>>> F
>>
>> 30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do
>
> operating temperature refers to the ambient temperature of the environment
> in which the cpu is operating... not the core temperature of the cpu
> itself, which in most cases will be significantly higher than ambient
> temperature of the machine's enclosure.
>
>> learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
>> temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
>> Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.
>
> you silly amerikans still using those darn imperial units down there? tsk
> tsk ;->
>
> --
> francis
>

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Post cpu temp 
"Miss Perspicacia Tick" <misstick.TakeThisOut@lancre.dw> wrote in message
news:EI9Xc.33445$Dz3.13800@fe48.usenetserver.com...
> Andrew E. wrote:
>> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
>> F
>
> 30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do

operating temperature refers to the ambient temperature of the environment
in which the cpu is operating... not the core temperature of the cpu itself,
which in most cases will be significantly higher than ambient temperature of
the machine's enclosure.

> learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
> temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
> Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.

you silly amerikans still using those darn imperial units down there? tsk
tsk ;->

--
francis

View user's profile Send private message
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Post cpu temp 
Andrew E. wrote:
> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
> F

30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do
learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.


temps: operates at 86 caution @ 130 max @ about 165


Huh?!?

> At 90 C youd have maxed out a P4,

No, at 90°C you'd have *KILLED* a P4.

if you have doubts of temp.,replace
> the fan,clean out the heat sink.Also make sure youre getting correct
> readings,you can purchase temp gauge strips (used in photography i
> believe), place a small section of the thin strip under the
> processor,thier suppose to work really well,and they cost only a few
> dollars.

And are completely useless for the purpose you describe.

--
My great-grandfather was born and raised in Elgin - did he eventually
lose his marbles?

View user's profile Send private message
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Post cpu temp 
Andrew E. wrote:
> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
> F

30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do
learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.


temps: operates at 86 caution @ 130 max @ about 165


Huh?!?

> At 90 C youd have maxed out a P4,

No, at 90°C you'd have *KILLED* a P4.

if you have doubts of temp.,replace
> the fan,clean out the heat sink.Also make sure youre getting correct
> readings,you can purchase temp gauge strips (used in photography i
> believe), place a small section of the thin strip under the
> processor,thier suppose to work really well,and they cost only a few
> dollars.

And are completely useless for the purpose you describe.

--
My great-grandfather was born and raised in Elgin - did he eventually
lose his marbles?

View user's profile Send private message
Reply with quote
Post cpu temp 
Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp

--
Good Day
Haus



"francis gérard" <spam DeleteThis @spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:e3v0oCwiEHA.3876@TK2MSFTNGP15.phx.gbl...
>
> "Miss Perspicacia Tick" <misstick DeleteThis @lancre.dw> wrote in message
> news:EI9Xc.33445$Dz3.13800@fe48.usenetserver.com...
>> Andrew E. wrote:
>>> Intel P4 C, caution- temp is 50-55,max is 70-72 operates at 30
>>> F
>>
>> 30°F eh? -1°C?! WOW! You must have a freon cooled system or something! Do
>
> operating temperature refers to the ambient temperature of the environment
> in which the cpu is operating... not the core temperature of the cpu
> itself, which in most cases will be significantly higher than ambient
> temperature of the machine's enclosure.
>
>> learn the difference between °F and °C. You're telling me that a P4s max
>> temperature is 72°F? That's roughly 22°C. 55°F is 13°C. So, according to
>> Andrew the Eejit the P4 has a temperature range of between 13 and 22°C.
>
> you silly amerikans still using those darn imperial units down there? tsk
> tsk ;->
>
> --
> francis
>

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Post cpu temp 
"me" <anonymous RemoveThis @discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:02c501c48af5$7c4eb4d0$a601280a@phx.gbl...
>i have an AMD athlon 2000+ cpu, and ive read its critical
> temperature is 90 degrees C
>
> however, it is currently operating at 96 degrees C. I
> have had no warning yet, or shut downs, is this dangerous?
>
> please help before i accidentally kill it, is it ok?



90°C is the maximum die temperature. In practice it is best not to exceed
60°C.
What utility are you using to monitor temperatures ? The BIOS or a Windows
utility ?

At any rate, your processor would be dead dead dead if it actually hit 90°C
or 194°F.


Download and install MBM 5.3.7.0 from here:
http://mbm.livewiredev.com/

Use the "Motherboard List" link on the left side to configure MBM to your
specific motherboard.

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Post cpu temp 
"me" <anonymous DeleteThis @discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:02c501c48af5$7c4eb4d0$a601280a@phx.gbl...
>i have an AMD athlon 2000+ cpu, and ive read its critical
> temperature is 90 degrees C
>
> however, it is currently operating at 96 degrees C. I
> have had no warning yet, or shut downs, is this dangerous?
>
> please help before i accidentally kill it, is it ok?



90°C is the maximum die temperature. In practice it is best not to exceed
60°C.
What utility are you using to monitor temperatures ? The BIOS or a Windows
utility ?

At any rate, your processor would be dead dead dead if it actually hit 90°C
or 194°F.


Download and install MBM 5.3.7.0 from here:
http://mbm.livewiredev.com/

Use the "Motherboard List" link on the left side to configure MBM to your
specific motherboard.

View user's profile Send private message
Reply with quote
Post cpu temp 
"Haus" <youknow@Iwillslapyou> wrote in message
news:10iqmiqjtne4g51@corp.supernews.com...
>
> Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
> http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp

right, maximum die temperature is b/w 70°C - 95°C, the critical point at
which point the CPU will experience a 'meltdown', the recommendation is to
not exceed a sustained operating temperature greater than 15-20°C of the max
die temp.

--
francis

View user's profile Send private message
Reply with quote
Post cpu temp 
"Haus" <youknow@Iwillslapyou> wrote in message
news:10iqmiqjtne4g51@corp.supernews.com...
>
> Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
> http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp

right, maximum die temperature is b/w 70°C - 95°C, the critical point at
which point the CPU will experience a 'meltdown', the recommendation is to
not exceed a sustained operating temperature greater than 15-20°C of the max
die temp.

--
francis

View user's profile Send private message
Reply with quote
Post cpu temp 
"francis gérard" <spam.DeleteThis@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:uvyCL0yiEHA.3416@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>
> "Haus" <youknow@Iwillslapyou> wrote in message
> news:10iqmiqjtne4g51@corp.supernews.com...
>>
>> Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
>> http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp
>
> right, maximum die temperature is b/w 70°C - 95°C, the critical
[...]
depending on type (model) of CPU, i forgot to add
--
francis

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Post cpu temp 
"francis gérard" <spam.DeleteThis@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:uvyCL0yiEHA.3416@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>
> "Haus" <youknow@Iwillslapyou> wrote in message
> news:10iqmiqjtne4g51@corp.supernews.com...
>>
>> Thermal & Electrical Spec's for AMD (die temp)
>> http://www.amd.com/gb-uk/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/K7_Ele...ical_Sp
>
> right, maximum die temperature is b/w 70°C - 95°C, the critical
[...]
depending on type (model) of CPU, i forgot to add
--
francis

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