Hi,
[ I'm late on thread, so briefly ]
If you get desperate overheating & crashes, try eg
/usr/sbin/powerd -a min -b min -n min
Thats what I'm doing on one box, till I can remove, review/ regrease.
One can also observe subsets of values from
sysctl -a | grep temp
in a while (1)
On Thursday 17 February 2011 21:20:57 Chuck Swiger wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2011, at 3:06 PM, Mario Lobo wrote:
> >> Most computer cases are designed with front-to-back airflow (ie, intake
> >> fans in the front, exhaust fans and the PSU in the back) and cool more
> >> effectively with the case on
>
On Feb 17, 2011, at 3:06 PM, Mario Lobo wrote:
>> Most computer cases are designed with front-to-back airflow (ie, intake fans
>> in the front, exhaust fans and the PSU in the back) and cool more
>> effectively with the case on
>
> Well, in my case, with the "BEFORE" situation, if I had the
At 7:53 PM -0300 2/17/11, Mario Lobo wrote:
>I replaced the thermal grease (as advised here) with a new one but that didn't
>change those figures.
I've not attempted to keep up with changes in thermal
conductivity of heat sink compounds for something like 40
years. About that time, National Semico
On Feb 17, 2011, at 2:53 PM, Mario Lobo wrote:
> Phenom II 955 w/ stock cooler
> With the side of the computer case off.
[ ...vs... ]
> Phenom II 955 w/ a ZALMAN CNPS 10x PERFORMA cooler
> With the side of the computer case ON.
Um, so you obviously aren't comparing similar circumstances. Most com
On Thursday 17 February 2011 19:59:18 Chuck Swiger wrote:
> Um, so you obviously aren't comparing similar circumstances.
No! Not at all.
> Most computer cases are designed with front-to-back airflow
> (ie, intake fans in the front, exhaust fans and the PSU in the back) and
> cool more effective
On Sunday 13 February 2011 18:52:16 Mario Lobo wrote:
> Hi;
>
> I am following 8-CURRENT AMD64. I have a Phenom II 955. Up to the 3rd week
> of January, I had 8-STABLE. Idle CPU temp was 42~44 C (which is already
> not excellent, i know) and full load would never go above 60 C (compiling
> VBox f
>
> Sorry to jump in, yes I would agree about Artic Silver 5, while researching
> the topic of thermal compounds I discovered that it takes approx 200 hours
> of being used before AS5 will start to operate at its peak.
>
That's only a little over 8 days...
_
-Original Message-
From: Chris Rees [mailto:utis...@gmail.com]
Sent: 14 February 2011 10:11
To: Mario Lobo
Cc: FreeBSD
Subject: Re: CPU heating!
On 13 Feb 2011 23:06, "Mario Lobo" wrote:
>
> Hi;
>
> I am following 8-CURRENT AMD64. I have a Phenom II 955.
On 14 Feb 2011 15:51, "Mario Lobo" wrote:
>
> On Monday 14 February 2011 11:32:18 Chris Brennan wrote:
> > > You need to replace the thermal grease on your processor? It goes hard
> > > and loses effectiveness. I recommend Arctic Silver 5.
> >
> > It even comes in this little push-tube applicator
On Monday 14 February 2011 11:32:18 Chris Brennan wrote:
> > You need to replace the thermal grease on your processor? It goes hard
> > and loses effectiveness. I recommend Arctic Silver 5.
>
> It even comes in this little push-tube applicator with a plunger ... but it
> works great! Arctic Silver
>
> You need to replace the thermal grease on your processor? It goes hard and
> loses effectiveness. I recommend Arctic Silver 5.
It even comes in this little push-tube applicator with a plunger ... but it
works great! Arctic Silver is probably the best their is, highly
recommended.
On 13 Feb 2011 23:06, "Mario Lobo" wrote:
>
> Hi;
>
> I am following 8-CURRENT AMD64. I have a Phenom II 955. Up to the 3rd week
of
> January, I had 8-STABLE. Idle CPU temp was 42~44 C (which is already not
> excellent, i know) and full load would never go above 60 C (compiling VBox
> from KDE, f
Hi;
I am following 8-CURRENT AMD64. I have a Phenom II 955. Up to the 3rd week of
January, I had 8-STABLE. Idle CPU temp was 42~44 C (which is already not
excellent, i know) and full load would never go above 60 C (compiling VBox
from KDE, for instance).
After updating to 8.2-PRERELEASE, my t
d.org
cc
Subject
how to check CPU Heating Capacity (Temperature)
I m using FreeBSD 5.4 on Intel Xeon Dual Processor machine, is there
any command r utility which may give the specific details, abt how
much percentage for cpu heat, means wat is specific temperature of
cpu.
Thanx in advance.
plete transmission of the information contained in this message nor for
any delay in its receipt.
"DeadMan Xia " <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
08/06/2005 11:29 PM
To
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
cc
Subject
how to check CPU Heating Capacity (Temperature)
I m using FreeBSD 5.4 on Intel Xeon Dual Processor machine, is there
any command r utility which may give the specific details, abt how
much percentage for cpu heat, means wat is specific temperature of
cpu.
Thanx in advance.
DeadMan Xia
___
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