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› cpu temp93 deg C is it normal
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cpu temp93 deg C is it normal (Read 1365 times)
Jun 11
th
, 2003 at 3:25pm
and49288
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Colonel
I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
london
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Posts: 88
Hi guys hope you can help, computer keeps crashing,would the cpu temp,be responsible?.
System fan reads 0 rpm cpu temp now is 73deg,last night read 93 deg,s, cpu is AMD XP2000,any explanations as to why the MB would go belly up after only 9 month,s? Just been replaced.Whats the normal temp for a CPU?
Im getting all kinds of differnt messages, 1 minute it will start next minute nothing will load, any advice will be welcome, cheers lads.
and49288&&&&Capt speaking, Ladies a gentlemen we,re about to land, would the man in the 4th row please return the stewardess to her full upright position, thank you.
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Reply #1 -
Jun 11
th
, 2003 at 3:33pm
Craig.
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Birmingham
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woah,i dont have to much knowledge of amd but i am almost sure that is not right way to hot. have you checked the fan to see if it being blocked or if something has gotten tangled in it? my laptop runs at about 32*c upto 50*c playing some games. and i believe that high temp could be responsible for the crashes. like i said open it up and check the fan or somethings bound to melt
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Reply #2 -
Jun 11
th
, 2003 at 3:47pm
and49288
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I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
london
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Posts: 88
hi done that, nothing ,s blocked the wires are rubbing against the case, of the fan, is that normal? it seems to be ok at the moment ,but for how long I wonder.
Its the same fan i,ve had for a year now and never caused problems before.
Any solutions ?
and49288&&&&Capt speaking, Ladies a gentlemen we,re about to land, would the man in the 4th row please return the stewardess to her full upright position, thank you.
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Reply #3 -
Jun 11
th
, 2003 at 5:24pm
Iroquois
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Happy Halloween
Ontario Canada
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Sounds like your fan may be shot. I'd highly recomend taking it to a computer repair store. A normal temp for a CPU should be 40-50C, if it stays like that, your CPU could burn out.
I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday.
&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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Reply #4 -
Jun 11
th
, 2003 at 10:38pm
Hogans_Alley
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Posts: 90
??? ??? ??? ???
93 degrees Centigrade equates to, lets see, (93 x 1.8) + 32 = 199.4 degrees Farenheit. Your CPU should've gone into convulsion. I would'nt take the chance. Get yourself a new CPU fan. They're not that expensive.
Hogans Alley
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Reply #5 -
Jun 12
th
, 2003 at 2:37am
and49288
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Colonel
I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
london
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Think it will be ok ,I messed about with it and it,s now about 53 deg,s all night .No problems so far.
keeping my fingers crossed .
cheers
and49288&&&&Capt speaking, Ladies a gentlemen we,re about to land, would the man in the 4th row please return the stewardess to her full upright position, thank you.
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Reply #6 -
Jun 15
th
, 2003 at 6:30am
ATI_9700pro
Ex Member
woah,93°C !!!!!
you should get a new cooler...or a new CPU,if it continues getting so hot...
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Reply #7 -
Jun 19
th
, 2003 at 2:47pm
Ivan
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No, I'm NOT Russian, I
only like Russian aircraft
The netherlands
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get some ArcticSilver 3 goo and apply it on the processor.
but first:
brush all the dust out of the cooler ribs and from the fan
Russian planes:
IL-76 (all standard length ones)
,
Tu-154 and Il-62
,
Tu-134
and
An-24RV
&&&&AI flightplans and repaints can be found
here
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Reply #8 -
Jun 20
th
, 2003 at 8:24am
congo
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Make BIOS your Friend
Australia
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EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You mean it's still alive!
AMAZING!!!
If your fan speed said 0 rpm, maybe it had stopped.
Don't just say, " oh I think it will be fine now...."
It really needs a careful checking over and leave the case side off for a while and listen to see if there is a power failure in the fan circuit even if you get a new fan.
You have probably already damaged your cpu beyond repair, lets just hope your mainboard isn't stuffed as well.
It takes just a fraction of a minute to blow an AMD CPU with no fan running so get it fixed.
You might be lucky though, a friend and myself left the fan cable off an XP1800 for a few mins, it blackened the mo/board a bit , but the cpu lasted another 4 months!
Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24" WS LCD
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Reply #9 -
Jun 20
th
, 2003 at 9:57am
Ivan
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Colonel
No, I'm NOT Russian, I
only like Russian aircraft
The netherlands
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Posts: 6058
I got my AMD 1800XP to a horrible 85 C on idle when i had the cooler mounted the wrong way around.
And try using a cooler which connects to the harddisk power connectors, that will spare your motherboard when having a heavy cooling fan
Russian planes:
IL-76 (all standard length ones)
,
Tu-154 and Il-62
,
Tu-134
and
An-24RV
&&&&AI flightplans and repaints can be found
here
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Reply #10 -
Jun 29
th
, 2003 at 3:55am
A_and_P
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Colonel
I love Simviation
Colorado
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Posts: 26
93 degrees C is extremely high: Your Mother Board would melt down.
You are probably reading F degrees not Celcius or what ever you are reading your temps with is giving you miss information.
Normall operating temperature depends on a lot of factors. But should be in this range.
Ferinheit degrees
80 to 100 Safe
100 to 110 Alarm Zone
110 to 130 Danger you will create damage to your computer.
1. Type of case Plastic or aluminum. Is it well ventilated, number of fans, does your case have enough air flow to prevent a vacum on the inside of the case? If you have a vacum in the case it will collect more dust?
2. Aluminum cools faster.
3. Type of fans you have. I suggest PC Power and cooling. They have a web sight but I do not remember what it is. Phone number is 760-931-5700 Carlsbad, CA.
4. Do not rely on software programs or digital readouts for internal tempretures. There often incorrect.
I recomend 110 Alert from PC Power and Cooling. It is an internal hardware item for about fifteen dollars. Monitors the internal tempretures and when it reaches 110 F alarms go off and the computer will shut down. Very simple to install. You use a Y connector from the Power Supply.
Try cleaning the inside of your computer with oxygen at least once a month. dust creates a lot of problems.
Hope this helps
A and P
Have A Great Day
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Reply #11 -
Jul 6
th
, 2003 at 3:56pm
congo
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Make BIOS your Friend
Australia
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Pure Oxygen in the presence of any grease should provide an explosion large enough to destroy your computer and everything else within several metres, with possibly fatal results, so please be careful when using it. OR DON'T!!!!!!!!!
???
Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24" WS LCD
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Reply #12 -
Jul 6
th
, 2003 at 4:39pm
Iroquois
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Happy Halloween
Ontario Canada
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Posts: 3244
Quote:
Pure Oxygen in the presence of any grease should provide an explosion large enough to destroy your computer and everything else within several metres, with possibly fatal results, so please be careful when using it. OR DON'T!!!!!!!!!
???
Good point Congo. I would recomend one of two things. One thing to try is get a small low powered hand vacuum and attatch the long narrow peice used for cleaning edges. Take a ball point pen and take out the ink cartrage. cut the opposite end off. Take the end with the larger hole stick it on the end of the edge cleaner and tape it in place. Now you can use the small holled end for percision vacuuming around delacate components. This is good for getting rid of dust.
Another way is to get the cans of compressed gas that you can get at Staples or any major office supply store. They contain some kind of compressed cleaning solution that is safe for electronics. Good for getting dust out of fans.
I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday.
&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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Reply #13 -
Jul 6
th
, 2003 at 4:52pm
congo
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Colonel
Make BIOS your Friend
Australia
Gender:
Posts: 3663
I carefully use an Oldfield's four inch painter's brush for
cleaning electronics, and a cotton bud and rubbing alcohol for the tricky bits when needed. But, I'm a bush
technician.
Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24" WS LCD
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Reply #14 -
Jul 9
th
, 2003 at 3:17pm
and49288
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Colonel
I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
london
Gender:
Posts: 88
Thanks for the tips guys.Bought a new fan for the CPU,but its still running higher than id like ,reduced the core voltage to 100mzh should be 133 mzh .Dont like reducing the voltage , though its an AMD xp 2000+,id like full capacity.
When I run the cpu at 133mhz the temp goes up to about 60 to 64 ect and i get problems,like i say just bought a new fan which should be good for a 3000 cpu .will try cleaning the damm thing and se what happens.Cheers guys any more advice would be gratful.
and49288&&&&Capt speaking, Ladies a gentlemen we,re about to land, would the man in the 4th row please return the stewardess to her full upright position, thank you.
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