Are the coolers on the CPUS dusty? That is, are they getting good airflow? I have an HPZ820, which unfortunately lacks fan control. The fan speed is only adjustable in BIOS. I noticed that if I set a low fan speed, but then pushed the CPUs hard for a while, the system would just shut down, so my only (apparent) choice is to set the fans on high and leave the machine suspended while not in use.
I'd check to see if there is good airflow through the coolers and also check to see that the fan speeds are cranked up (in BIOS, if necessary). -- Russell Senior [email protected] On Wed, Sep 10, 2025 at 6:38 PM American Citizen <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello: > > I have an HP Z420 workstation with 6 Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2 cores which I > keep 100% busy. Lately I have noticed the past 1/2 year that the sensor > temps are slowly rising. > > They used to be in the 70 deg Celsius range, but just yesterday they > were averaging 77 to 82 deg Celsius which seems high. > > The cooler is the HP 647287-001 5-Pin LGA 2011 Heatsink for Z420 and > it's rated to take 130W cooling and handle the Xeon cpus okay. > > Could my cooler be going bad? 2 weeks ago I changed the thermal paste, > and that did not make any difference in the CPU temps. > > Can anyone share what they see on their Intel Xeon chips under full load? > > Randall > > ------ reading at 6:35 pm > > > Package id 0: +179.6°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 0: +168.8°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 1: +176.0°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 2: +174.2°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 3: +168.8°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 4: +179.6°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) > > Core 5: +174.2°F (high = +176.0°F, crit = +194.0°F) >
