Some 603ev chips do have the thermocouple on them. Most notably the ones used in the PowerBooks. I know that my 5300 and 5300cs do. And although I'm not 100% I fairly well recall my PM6500/250 being able to do temp. Neither was with Gauge PRO though. I've long since forgotten what apps I did use. Sorry.
-Robyn On Friday, December 6, 2002, at 09:54 PM, Ben Wells wrote: > The PPC 604 CPU doesn't contain an onboard thermocouple, and I'd > therefore > assume neither does the 603. Gauge Pro obviously needs to interface > with > it to get a reading. G3s and G4s display temperature fine. > > I had problems with a 200MP daughter card that'd run super-hot... Gauge > Pro was obviously useless so I just hooked up a K-type thermocouple to > my > DMM and used that to track what's happening. I plan on hard installing > a > couple of thermocouples when my 9600 gains a trio of SCSI-LVD drives, > so I > can carefully monitor those aswell. -- Vintage Macs is sponsored by <http://lowendmac.com/> and... Small Dog Electronics http://www.smalldog.com | Enter To Win A | -- Canon PowerShot Digital Cameras start at $299 | Free iBook! | Support Low End Mac <http://lowendmac.com/lists/support.html> Vintage Macs list info: <http://lowendmac.com/lists/vintagemacs.shtml> The FAQ: <http://macfaq.org/> --> AOL users, remove "mailto:" Send list messages to: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For digest mode, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subscription questions: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/vintage.macs%40mail.maclaunch.com/> Using a Mac? Free email & more at Applelinks! http://www.applelinks.com