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Thread: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2008
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    Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    I have inserted a new fan and run Everest. Receive the following measured values in the idle:

    CPU ............. 14 degrees C
    CPU core 1 ... 41 degrees C
    CPU Core 2 ... 42 degrees C

    Which of these temperatures is correct? What I should look for if I should watch? Have read around mine CPU (E8400) and see that many have had a bug with frozen temp-values, so wonder if there are any abnormalities with mine. The fan runs at 1200rpm preliminary since I do not quite dare to put it down before I know whether this is completely safe.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2008
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    Re: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    How cold is it in space you are in? If it is over 14 degrees, is the first error. (Since you have air conditioning)

    Would proud of core temperature (The two lower)

  3. #3
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    Re: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    Cores provide both best indication. Unless you have <14 degrees in the room as the CPU temp error.

  4. #4
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    Re: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    Do 14 degrees is completely wrong, yes if you do not sit on the north with degrees in the Room ... Is not common with such temperature when it is around 0 degrees out in our country in any case.

  5. #5
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    Re: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    Has approximately 17 degrees in the room to normal.

    Known for ribs, and it was much colder than 40 degrees in each case. But how do Everest to deliver results so inconsistent? And what is the difference between those?

  6. #6
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    Re: Which of the 3 temperatures are correct for my CPU ?

    If temperature do not change at all as you have a sensor that "stuck". It should not be dangerous, but overclocking should put on if you've been so unlucky with this processor.

    Heat sink is not to be at 40 degrees even if the cores are. You have a temperature sensor in the processor that shows the core temperature and that indicates the temperature of the "metal" around, the latter being quite logical part colder than the middle of the processor, including because that when the cores are smaller so the heat is harder to drive away. Even if you have a good air cooled so it will feel a part colder than the temperature of the cores.

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