On 8 Jul 2003, Shri Shrikumar wrote:
> On Tue, 2003-07-08 at 00:52, Roberto Sanchez wrote: > > I adjusted the the "FSB Frequency" down from 166 MHz to 133 MHz. I usually > > get temps of 48-52 C after a few hours of normal use (running as a 1900+). > > If I do anything CPU intensive (compile a kernel, zip or unzip a huge file, > > etc.) then it hot enough that I can't even think of running it as a 2500+ > > and as a 1900+ the temps go to 53-57 C. That seems a bit high to me. thats too high .. by around 10C-15C for midtower/full cases > I have a P4 which has a normal temperature range of upto around 70 > degress Celsius. AMD chips are supposed to run even hotter so, 53-57 > degrees C sound fine to me. You should google around to find its > temperature range. a P4 should be running at about 30-35C ... in idle i think your either your heatsink is bad or your fan is not spinning right amd XP runs about 5-10C higher ... cpu temps are highly dependant upon: - good seal between heatsink and cpu ( use good thermal grease ) - good thermal coefficents between air and the heatsink to pull the heat off the heatsink - cpu w/ copper heatsinks are a bitch to keep cool since copper is a good thermal conductor - good streaming air flow across the cpu heatsinks - number of heatsink fins also effects the cpu temp as does the thickness of the heatsink on the cpu all temps from bios "pc health monitor" vs lmsensors ( can be way off ) you're killing your CPU at half-life rates for every 10C increase in cpu temp from 25C http://www.linux-1u.net/CPU/ > Like others have suggested, I would recommend running memtest to ensure > that there is nothing wrong with your memory modules. Also, what seen many/few memory modules that pass memtest/memtest86 ... but fails in 2 minutes when running a real app like compiling the kernel or dumping/streaming data onto the network - run some streaming video apps and it finds all kinds of hw problems > graphics card are you using and does it lock up even if you re not in X memtest does NOT prove that memory is bad ... - you can have a timing problem between mb and mem modules - you can have timing problems between mem modules - you can have cpu/motherboards running fsb-200 vs fsb-333 vs fsb-400 vs fsb-533 vs fsb-800 and the corresponding memory fsb -- be sure your jumpers are set right for the cpu and memory and pci buss speeds -- use a different/better memory stick ... usully is 10x more reliable of an answer if the "system works" or not ( use kingstron, mushkin, corsair, memory sticks ( use lei, century, atp, etc... - no manufacturers label or if their mem prices is 1/2 of kingston/mushkin/corsair... than you've potentiall got a memory problem out of the box c ya alvin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]