On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 07:30, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 01:22, Jack Coates wrote:
> > On Tue, 2003-07-15 at 12:11, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
>
> > You'll like this Lyvim...
> >
> > I've known for a while that my everything server cum router cum wife's
> > workstation was overheating, b
On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 01:22, Jack Coates wrote:
> On Tue, 2003-07-15 at 12:11, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> You'll like this Lyvim...
>
> I've known for a while that my everything server cum router cum wife's
> workstation was overheating, but it's only been a major problem (e.g.
> interrupting task at
On Tue, 2003-07-15 at 12:11, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Tue, 2003-07-15 at 14:11, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
>
> >
> > I had a system that was experiencing periodic lockups recently. Turns
> > out the cpu temps were creeping up to around 78C. Improving the case
> > cooling brought the temp down to
On Thursday 17 July 2003 03:19 am, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> But the problem is that they specifically describe the bearing as
> "magnetic tip driven." In addition to that they also say
> "bearingless". This to me is inescapable verbage.
>
> LX
Almost sounds like the monorail magnet concept.
Or li
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 02:00, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 03:45, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
>
> > Got some new news. Looks like you were right James; on all counts.
> > It's basically a little gyro that uses the weight at the edges of the
> > fan (magnets) to resist movement off it's pla
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 06:05, J.C. Woods wrote:
> >
> Oh, come on, LX, would you kindly take that fan completely apart, and
> give us a count on the number of parts. And, after you get it put back
> together and installed, let us know how really nice it works.
>
> Thanks,
> drjung
Sorry, JC
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 06:01, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> On Wednesday July 16 2003 08:14 pm, James Sparenberg wrote:
> > > [root /tom] $ hddtemp /dev/hd[ab]
> > > /dev/hda: Maxtor 6Y080L0: 67°C
> > > /dev/hdb: MAXTOR 6L040J2: 47°C
> > >
> > > I don't know whether to believe this output or not. They'r
On Wednesday July 16 2003 08:14 pm, James Sparenberg wrote:
> > [root /tom] $ hddtemp /dev/hd[ab]
> > /dev/hda: Maxtor 6Y080L0: 67°C
> > /dev/hdb: MAXTOR 6L040J2: 47°C
> >
> > I don't know whether to believe this output or not. They're
> > good performing HDD's, not a hint of problem. Jeez, I c
Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
I've got one now in my hand. The magnets that actually turn the fan are
on the outside edge that joins all the blade tips together in a circle.
They don't ever actually touch anything. The center point seems to be
the "magnetic tip." But I can't confirm that without unscrew
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 03:45, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> Got some new news. Looks like you were right James; on all counts.
> It's basically a little gyro that uses the weight at the edges of the
> fan (magnets) to resist movement off it's plane of operation. Also,
> they do actually have small ball
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 01:07, James Sparenberg wrote:
> > > This is not the same thing. This is new bearingless technology. It
> > > utilizes something called a magnetic tip. My understanding is that the
> > > fan blade is suspended by a magnetic field.
> > >
> > Really. Interesting. Must be one
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 13:53, James Sparenberg wrote:
>I think by bearingless they actually do mean sealed bearing. It's
> more a case of marketing taking a technical term and misusing it to the
> point of extreme obfuscation of term (ie "Trusted Computing" by M$)
> rather than what it actuall
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 01:07, James Sparenberg wrote:
> > Really. Interesting. Must be one heck of a magnet to handle the torque and
> > thrust of the fan eh?
>
> Just a thought here. But if you think about it torque and thrust for
> the spinning fan (assuming a constant speed) will be almost 0.
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 19:57, Lorne wrote:
> On Wednesday 16 July 2003 09:04 am, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 09:59, Lorne wrote:
> > > On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > > > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > > > the ind
On Wednesday 16 July 2003 10:53 am, James Sparenberg wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 06:59, Lorne wrote:
> > On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > > the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are,
On Wednesday 16 July 2003 08:38 am, diego wrote:
> Which mark and model? I'm really concerned about noise and temp...
>
Well first I have to thank you! I went to look and realized that my fan filter
was plugged with dust! I don't have any special brands, I just looked for
ball bearing muffin fans
On Wednesday 16 July 2003 09:04 am, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 09:59, Lorne wrote:
> > On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > > the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, wel
On Wednesday 16 July 2003 07:33 pm, Tom Brinkman wrote:
>Interesting that your temp on the same drive is half what mine
> reports. H ;) FWIW, I've got good case cooling, a fan on my
> HDD's to boot
I figured you did have good cooling, thats why I was going "hmm". :-)
I've got the 2 fan
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 14:34, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> On Wednesday July 16 2003 01:20 pm, James Sparenberg wrote:
> > I'm reminded of a story from a friend of mine. Had a HDD
> > overheat. Couldn't read it. Stuck it in the freezer overnight.
> > And then it would work for about 30 minutes. Stick i
On Wednesday July 16 2003 05:58 pm, Ronald J. Hall wrote:
> > hddtemp-0.3-0.beta4.2mdk (rpm)
> >
> > [root /tom] $ hddtemp /dev/hd[ab]
> > /dev/hda: Maxtor 6Y080L0: 67°C
> > /dev/hdb: MAXTOR 6L040J2: 47°C
> >
> > I don't know whether to believe this output or not. They're
> > good performing
On Wednesday 16 July 2003 05:34 pm, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> hddtemp-0.3-0.beta4.2mdk (rpm)
>
> [root /tom] $ hddtemp /dev/hd[ab]
> /dev/hda: Maxtor 6Y080L0: 67°C
> /dev/hdb: MAXTOR 6L040J2: 47°C
>
> I don't know whether to believe this output or not. They're good
> performing HDD's, not a hint
On Wednesday July 16 2003 01:20 pm, James Sparenberg wrote:
> I'm reminded of a story from a friend of mine. Had a HDD
> overheat. Couldn't read it. Stuck it in the freezer overnight.
> And then it would work for about 30 minutes. Stick it back in
> the freezer... read off more data. About 5 o
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 17:04, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 09:59, Lorne wrote:
> > On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > > the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, well,
> >
Which mark and model? I'm really concerned about noise and temp...
I'm running a XP 1800+ (1500MHz) downclocked to 1100MHz in summer (40ºC
in the room!). To me it's quite acceptable cpu temp go up to 60ºC at
full load with a noise less than 40dB
El mié, 16-07-2003 a las 15:59, Lorne escrib
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 13:45, James Sparenberg wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 06:24, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
> > > HSF's that outperform the Areoflow don't do it by a significant
> > > margin and plus they weigh a ton cause usually they are solid copper.
> > > That can possibly put a physical stra
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 06:59, Lorne wrote:
> On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, well,
> > bearingless.
>
> If you are referring to the old bushing
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 01:21, Olaf Marzocchi wrote:
> > I'm not really worried about the temp...having read the docs from
> > AMD, I won't worry till it hits 65C, which it has never done :)
>
> I'm not worried about the temp too, but I'm worried about the HD. If it
> reaches 45°C, you have to
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 06:24, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
> On Tuesday 15 July 2003 01:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> >
> > But you can chill those puppies and you might be able to get
> > stability under high load with no problem. What I would do is
> > install two Vantec Areoflow heat sink fans (they h
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 09:59, Lorne wrote:
> On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> > The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> > the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, well,
> > bearingless.
>
> If you are referring to the old bushing
On Tuesday 15 July 2003 12:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
> the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, well,
> bearingless.
If you are referring to the old bushing fans, there is no way they are more
"reliable". They
On Tuesday 15 July 2003 01:11 pm, Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
>
> But you can chill those puppies and you might be able to get
> stability under high load with no problem. What I would do is
> install two Vantec Areoflow heat sink fans (they have copper cores,
> surrounded by a block of machined aluminum)
On Tuesday 15 July 2003 09:16 pm, Greg Meyer wrote:
> On Tuesday 15 July 2003 02:11 pm, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
> > Anyone know which mbs have the core temp sensors?
>
> It's the processor that has the sensor, the motherboard must have the
> ability to read it, and then libsensors has to be able to
At 21.11 15/07/2003, you wrote:
The Areoflows have bearingless fans which are some of the quietest in
the industry, and ultimately reliable because they are, well,
bearingless. It is possible to get a better thermal resistance with
another HSF, but not without going to a bearing based fan, and the
I'm not really worried about the temp...having read the docs from
AMD, I won't worry till it hits 65C, which it has never done :)
I'm not worried about the temp too, but I'm worried about the HD. If it
reaches 45°C, you have to do something. In fact, I'm thinking to buy a case
fan (termocont
On Tuesday 15 July 2003 02:11 pm, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
> Anyone know which mbs have the core temp sensors?
It's the processor that has the sensor, the motherboard must have the ability
to read it, and then libsensors has to be able to translate it. For
instance, my Soyo KT400 Dragon Ultra ha
On Tuesday July 15 2003 01:11 pm, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
> Anyone know which mbs have the core temp sensors?
From reading, not experience a few Asus, Gigabyte and a
coupl'a others for new AMD XP's. IIRC, I read it to Tom's Hardware
Guide. Check there or Google.
--
Tom Brinkman
On Tue, 2003-07-15 at 14:11, Thomas K. Gamble wrote:
>
> I had a system that was experiencing periodic lockups recently. Turns
> out the cpu temps were creeping up to around 78C. Improving the case
> cooling brought the temp down to around 63C under load. Still not
> ideal, but the system is
On Thursday 10 July 2003 09:51 am, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> On Thursday July 10 2003 09:19 am, Jack Coates wrote:
> > Is it just me, or does 205 to 230 degrees Fahrenheit seem a bit
> > excessive for the maximum temperature of a desktop? Yikes! I'm
> > nervous enough about the operating temperature of
On September 1993 plus 3600 days Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Fri, 2003-07-11 at 00:55, Robert Crawford wrote:
>> On Friday 11 July 2003 12:35 am, Vox wrote:
>> > On September 1993 plus 3599 days James Sparenberg wrote:
>> > > Vox,
>> > > Last ditch if you get worried. open the side and put a small
On Fri, 2003-07-11 at 00:55, Robert Crawford wrote:
> On Friday 11 July 2003 12:35 am, Vox wrote:
> > On September 1993 plus 3599 days James Sparenberg wrote:
> > > Vox,
> > > Last ditch if you get worried. open the side and put a small desk fan
> > > right on it. From the hardware standpoint.
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 22:48, Vox wrote:
> >
> > It's been my experience with numerous AMD cpus that anything over 45c. is
> > likely to start causing random misc. problems. I always start feeling
> > apprehensive when my temps go above 40c. Why AMD states up to 90c. is beyond
> > me. The one tim
On Fri, 2003-07-11 at 00:15, James Sparenberg wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 15:55, Vox wrote:
> > > The stock fan that comes with the Athlon is not the best deal in the
> > > world. The real deal is a Vantec Areoflow VA4-C7040. That's a
> > > fantastic piece of engineering, and it doesn't cost
On September 1993 plus 3600 days Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> I considered the Volcano 7 and the Volcano 9 in the following URL while
> doing research on HSF's, before I purchased one, and although their
> results were impressive the reason I went with the Areoflow was because
> it beat those two, plus t
DK7.2...
rgds
Franki
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Robert Crawford
Sent: Friday, 11 July 2003 12:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [expert] CPU temperature question
On Friday 11 July 2003 12:35 am, Vox wrote:
> On September 1993 p
On September 1993 plus 3599 days Robert Crawford wrote:
> On Friday 11 July 2003 12:35 am, Vox wrote:
>> On September 1993 plus 3599 days James Sparenberg wrote:
>> > Vox,
>> > Last ditch if you get worried. open the side and put a small desk fan
>> > right on it. From the hardware standpoint.
On Friday 11 July 2003 12:35 am, Vox wrote:
> On September 1993 plus 3599 days James Sparenberg wrote:
> > Vox,
> > Last ditch if you get worried. open the side and put a small desk fan
> > right on it. From the hardware standpoint. make sure cables (like
> > ribbon cables) are clear of the fa
On September 1993 plus 3599 days James Sparenberg wrote:
>
> Vox,
> Last ditch if you get worried. open the side and put a small desk fan
> right on it. From the hardware standpoint. make sure cables (like
> ribbon cables) are clear of the fan. Also you might consider case fans
> in addition
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 15:55, Vox wrote:
> On September 1993 plus 3599 days Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 02:38, Vox wrote:
> >> On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >>
> >> > Hello All,
> >> >
> >> > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering wh
On September 1993 plus 3599 days Lyvim Xaphir wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 02:38, Vox wrote:
>> On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>> > Hello All,
>> >
>> > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
>> > temperatures for the CPU and Moth
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 13:14, James Sparenberg wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 05:43, Jack Coates wrote:
> > On Wed, 2003-07-09 at 05:12, Phil wrote:
> > > Hello All,
> > >
> > > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> > > temperatures for the CPU and Mother board
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 05:43, Jack Coates wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-09 at 05:12, Phil wrote:
> > Hello All,
> >
> > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> > temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
> >
> > I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 03:54, Thomas Backlund wrote:
> From: "Joerg Mertin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hehe :)
>
> > Got a Hush-PC on my Desk, M1 with nemiah Core. Actual Processing
> > tempoerature: 57 C :)
> >
> > Didn't manage to get the lm_sensors stuff working on my Asus A7N8X Delux
> > board -
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 07:19, Jack Coates wrote:
> Is it just me, or does 205 to 230 degrees Fahrenheit seem a bit
> excessive for the maximum temperature of a desktop? Yikes! I'm nervous
> enough about the operating temperature of 122 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit.
No joke..
Now you know why they
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 05:03, ed tharp wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 02:38, Vox wrote:
> > On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> > > Hello All,
> > >
> > > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> > > temperatures for the CPU and Mother
On Thursday July 10 2003 09:19 am, Jack Coates wrote:
> Is it just me, or does 205 to 230 degrees Fahrenheit seem a bit
> excessive for the maximum temperature of a desktop? Yikes! I'm
> nervous enough about the operating temperature of 122 to 158
> degrees Fahrenheit.
> > The AMD docs I read
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 10:19, Jack Coates wrote:
> Is it just me, or does 205 to 230 degrees Fahrenheit seem a bit
> excessive for the maximum temperature of a desktop? Yikes! I'm nervous
> enough about the operating temperature of 122 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit.
>
Overclockers usually don't like a
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 08:43, Jack Coates wrote:
> On Wed, 2003-07-09 at 05:12, Phil wrote:
> > Hello All,
> >
> > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> > temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
> >
> > I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently
Is it just me, or does 205 to 230 degrees Fahrenheit seem a bit
excessive for the maximum temperature of a desktop? Yikes! I'm nervous
enough about the operating temperature of 122 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit.
> The AMD docs I read said 90 to 95C internal core is the failure
> limit. They also
On Thursday 10 July 2003 08:49 am, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> On Thursday July 10 2003 05:52 am, Thomas Backlund wrote:
> > > I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently running at 60
> > > degrees C while
> >
> > the
> >
> > > Mother Board temperature is 24 degrees C. I remember that these
> >
> > tem
On Wed, 2003-07-09 at 05:12, Phil wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
>
> I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently running at 60 degrees C while the
> Mother Board temperature
On Thursday July 10 2003 05:52 am, Thomas Backlund wrote:
> > I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently running at 60
> > degrees C while
>
> the
>
> > Mother Board temperature is 24 degrees C. I remember that these
>
> temperatures
>
> > were quite a bit higher during Summer.
>
> If I remember
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 02:38, Vox wrote:
> On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Hello All,
> >
> > After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> > temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
> >
> > I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is
Cool news.
Thx for notifying us :)
Cheers
Joerg
Thomas Backlund wrote:
From: "Joerg Mertin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hehe :)
Got a Hush-PC on my Desk, M1 with nemiah Core. Actual Processing
tempoerature: 57 C :)
Didn't manage to get the lm_sensors stuff working on my Asus A7N8X Delux
board - s
My main computer with AMD Duron 1.3GHz (Morgan core) is now running with
CPU Temp 43C, MB temp 33C, ambient room temp 23C with 100% cpu load
([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Cooling is handled by 1 19dB 80mm fan in front as intake, 1 24dB 80mm in
back as out. and CPU cooler is Speeze RaptorCool I. The computer
From: "Joerg Mertin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hehe :)
> Got a Hush-PC on my Desk, M1 with nemiah Core. Actual Processing
> tempoerature: 57 C :)
>
> Didn't manage to get the lm_sensors stuff working on my Asus A7N8X Delux
> board - so can't tell you what I'll see on my AMD box.
>
As for nForce2 lm
From: "Phil" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hello All,
>
> After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
>
> I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently running at 60 degrees C while
the
> Mother Board temperature is 24 degre
Hehe :)
Got a Hush-PC on my Desk, M1 with nemiah Core. Actual Processing
tempoerature: 57 C :)
Didn't manage to get the lm_sensors stuff working on my Asus A7N8X Delux
board - so can't tell you what I'll see on my AMD box.
Cheers
Joerg
Vox wrote:
On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL
On September 1993 plus 3598 days [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> After playing with Ksensors tonight I'm now wondering what the threshold
> temperatures for the CPU and Mother board should be.
>
> I have an AMD XP2000+ CPU which is currently running at 60 degrees C while the
> Mother B
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