Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
The CPU temperature you see in the BIOS is the CPU core temperature minus an
offset (most likely the offset is subtracted for fan control, or to get more of
a head spreader temperature value). Since the Open Hardware Monitor reads
already the correct core temperature directly from the CPU, the wrong CPU
"temperature" value from the W83667HG (which is the same as in the BIOS) is not
shown.
I have added a mainboard specific configuration for the ASUS P6T which now
should also hide the unused auxiliary temperature. Also the fans should be
labeled correctly, and all the voltages should be displayed. Please test with
this new version:
http://openhardwaremonitor.org/files/openhardwaremonitor-v0.4.0.1-alpha.zip
What is strange about the HDD temperatures? A difference of 4 degree is not
uncommon when they are stacked and one of the two gets more airflow.
The thrid value in the report is "Min". You can show the "Min" value also in
the GUI if you like (View -> Columns -> Min).
Please report with the new version if all is correct now.
Original comment by moel.mich
on 18 Jan 2012 at 10:10
I tried to post this comment on Issue #316 but the post did not seem to
work:
I checked the changes that you made - aux temp is gone and fans are
labelled correctly. I checked the min box and I see that the Min, Max and
Value columns all read the same except for a few cases - see attached
report. The max CPU temp is 75 C as reported in BIOS - I know this because
I had a fan blockage which raised the CPU temp to 80 C, which was displayed
in red. The MB gives a warning when you reboot with an overtemp.
I cleared the blockage and watched the BIOS as the temp dropped. When it
hot 75 C the red text changed to blue. Assuming approx 20 C offset such as
you mentioned then the "real" max temp would be about 95 C.
Original comment by flyingno...@gmail.com
on 19 Jan 2012 at 5:23
The Min and Max column show the minimum and maximum the actual value (Value
column) reached since you started the Open Hardware Monitor (or you clicked
Reste Min/Max).
The max core temperature your CPU can reach before hardware throttling starts
is 100°C (you can see this as TjMax parameter in the report). But of course
you should not get close to this TjMax to be sure your hardware isn't getting
damaged.
Original comment by moel.mich
on 19 Jan 2012 at 6:20
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
flyingno...@gmail.com
on 18 Jan 2012 at 8:37Attachments: