my quad xeon hits around 102F when running a heavy compute bound
process.  When idle the processors sit at around room temp.  (102F
is roughly 39C if my calculations are close).



Robert Hyatt                    Computer and Information Sciences
[EMAIL PROTECTED]               University of Alabama at Birmingham
(205) 934-2213                  115A Campbell Hall, UAB Station 
(205) 934-5473 FAX              Birmingham, AL 35294-1170

On Sat, 29 May 1999, Brendan Cully wrote:

> On Thursday, 27 May 1999 at 12:43, Michael Born wrote:
> > hallo
> > 
> > after having trouble with elitegroup ppga->slo1 adapters (they don't do
> > dual at 100MHz FSB) the msi ms-6905 v1.1 let my system run at 2*450MHz.
> > to check stability i ran "rc5des" (some cryptographic stuff that uses both
> > cpu's to 100%) for 13 hours in my closed tower. after that i rebooted the
> > system to check the system monitor in the BIOS. the temperatures were:
> > 
> > CPU1  52 degrees celsius 
> > CPU2  49 degrees celsius
> > 
> > so, now my questions...
> > 
> > are these temperatures too high? has anybody else some numbers to compare 
> > to? maybe a dual PII 450 system?
> > 
> > do you know a system monitoring program for linux which displays the
> > temperature (to save the rebooting)?
> > 
> > the system: 2*celeron450a, gigabyte 6bxd board
> > 
> > everything is still stable and perfectliy running under linux, but i'm not
> > quite sure about the temperature...because i want to let the system run 24
> > hours a day.
> > 
> > thanks for posting your numbers...
> > 
> > regards michael
> 
> I don't know whether those numbers are good for your machine, but on
> mine at least they haven't affected stability. As you can see from the
> output below, my CPUs run at about the same temperature after about an
> hour of rc5des. Still, with summer coming I will probably not be
> running rc5 as often. :)
> 
> I'm running two PII/350s. I have the gigabyte 6bxds board, which is
> probably identical, and it looks like the 3.3V channel runs at more
> like 3.5 all the time, which probably is a factor in the high CPU
> temperature.
> 
> The program I'm using to generate this output is lm_sensors 2. You
> can find it at http://www.netroedge.com/~lm78/
> 
> Regards,
> Brendan
> 
> xanadu:~$ sensors 
> lm78-i2c-0-2d
> Adapter: SMBus PIIX4 adapter at 5000
> Algorithm: Non-I2C SMBus adapter
> VCore 1:   +2.00 V  (min =  +1.90 V, max =  +2.09 V)   
> VCore 2:   +1.98 V  (min =  +1.90 V, max =  +2.09 V)   
> +3.3V:     +3.47 V  (min =  +3.32 V, max =  +3.66 V)   
> +5V:       +5.07 V  (min =  +4.72 V, max =  +5.24 V)   
> +12V:     +12.31 V  (min = +11.36 V, max = +12.58 V)   
> -12V:     -11.82 V  (min = -11.33 V, max = -12.55 V)   
> -5V:       -5.06 V  (min =  -4.74 V, max =  -5.24 V)   
> fan1:     4326 RPM  (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2)          
> fan2:     4411 RPM  (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2)          
> fan3:        0 RPM  (min =    0 RPM, div = 2)          
> temp:     +40 C     (limit = +60 C,  hysteresis = +50 C) 
> vid:      +3.40 V
> alarms:   Board temperature input (usually LM75 chips)   
> alarms:   Chassis intrusion detection                         
> 
> lm75-i2c-0-48
> Adapter: SMBus PIIX4 adapter at 5000
> Algorithm: Non-I2C SMBus adapter
> temp:       49.5 C (limit:   60.0 C, hysteresis:   50.0 C)
> 
> lm75-i2c-0-49
> Adapter: SMBus PIIX4 adapter at 5000
> Algorithm: Non-I2C SMBus adapter
> temp:       51.5 C (limit:   60.0 C, hysteresis:   50.0 C)
> 
> xanadu:~$ 
> 
> -- 
> Brendan Cully <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> "I hope I don't win
>  The rules say to bring a friend
>  I don't have any"
> -
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> 

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