Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
I agree, but I'd suggest more than 2 successive readings.
I've recently seen more motherboards that report HIGHLY anomalous data from
time-to-time...even in the BIOS Settings (usu. "health" or similar menu)
displays.
These anomalous readings can be both high or low, and can cause FALSE ALARMS
unless the monitoring programs "massage" the data to eliminate them.
BTW, on one motherboard, I was able to eliminate this problem with the CPU fan
RPM report/alarm by changing the CPU fan from using PWM control to
voltage-level control (a capability luckily provided by a user-setting in a
BIOS Settings menu). I would PREFER to run the CPU fan using PWM, but such is
life.
Original comment by transgen...@gmail.com
on 12 Sep 2011 at 6:12
I should add that the anomalous readings persisted through tests with different
CPU fans running in PWM control mode. This strongly suggests to me that this is
a motherboard firmware and/or hardware problem. It may be common to a specific
firmware, or specific integrated circuit manufacturer's chip that is shared by
various motherboard manufacturers (e.g. Gigabyte, ASUS, etc). I suggest there
is likely a timing issue that interferes with the sensor reading update code
that causes false RPM data to be acquired by the firmware.
Original comment by transgen...@gmail.com
on 12 Sep 2011 at 6:29
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
old...@ymail.com
on 8 Jun 2011 at 6:06