Thread: Speedfan, what the hell?
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:06 PM
#1
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:08 PM
#2
What I usually do is to fire up Prime95 and monitor the one that starts trending upward. And that should be your CPU temp.
Hmmm ... Your HD temp (47C) seems rather high to me ...
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:11 PM
#3
Are you sure you have that many temp sensors? those could be just invalid numbers which have no temp sensor so they give fake numbers.
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:13 PM
#4

Originally Posted by
steve.m
Are you sure you have that many temp sensors? those could be just invalid numbers which have no temp sensor so they give fake numbers.
How do I check?
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:14 PM
#5

Originally Posted by
bokep
How do I check?
http://www.almico.com/sfhandleconfig.php
dl the right config version for your MB.
also your MB manual should say where temp sensors are.
for my MB, speedfan records an outrageous temp for mY northbrige, yet after checking a MSI forum I found ppl had similar problem and the Mod told them to ignore temp because there is no temp sensor for Northbridge for my MB. In fact the fake temp was removed from a similar MSI app for overclocking/temp monitoring called Corecenter.
your temp 3 is funny 128 cel. yeah right. i smell smoke 
here is mine btw
Last edited by steve.m; Nov 27th, 2005 at 09:24 PM.
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:31 PM
#6
Everest Home Edition is pretty good - it actually tells you what components are at what temperatures. Of course, it might not be accurate (temps vary from program to program), but it'll at least give you a better idea of what that extremely high temp is for. I wouldn't worry - a temp of 128C at idle can't be *anything* serious.
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:33 PM
#7
good idea test it with other apps, another is motherboard monitor.
I did not find much info on speed fan as far as a forum for the app, so you may want to check the forum of your motherboard and do a seach for speedfan like i did.You should find ppl with your MB with similar questions and answers.
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Nov 27th, 2005 09:40 PM
#8
one of my previous system was screwed up like that too. i always thought it had something to do with the mobo. cuz all the apps would show similar number which made no sense at all.
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Nov 27th, 2005 10:00 PM
#9
Yeah my mobo kind of sucks. I'm going to blame it for the screwy temps. Thanks all.
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Nov 27th, 2005 10:04 PM
#10
I don't really trust some of those programs. The one to moniter temps that came with my gigabyte mobo once said my cpu was running at 1,500,000c and my fan speed was 26,000 rpm before I downloaded the new version of the program which then corrected this "small" error.
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Nov 27th, 2005 10:26 PM
#11
Putting together some PC's to sell, and one of them gives some interesting temps. An Iwill P4HT motherboard with a P4-2400 533fsb northwood. Cpu temp is 15c at idle
with a thin layer of arctic silver and a prescott HSF. Temp is the same in the bios and with Everest. Room temp is 20c.
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Nov 27th, 2005 11:00 PM
#12
i use nvidia monitor and it works great for my abit nf7s nf2 board. speedfan gave me crazy numbers and so did mobo monitor.
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Nov 28th, 2005 03:15 AM
#13

Originally Posted by
steve.m
for my MB, speedfan records an outrageous temp for mY northbrige, yet after checking a MSI forum I found ppl had similar problem and the Mod told them to ignore temp because there is no temp sensor for Northbridge for my MB.
Really? I had an MSI K7N2-ILSR and even that had a sensor for the NB - the manual didn't say anything about a sensor on the NB either but there was one. I was for a while wondering what the 3rd sensor was when I was monitoring temperatures because it was so high at 60 degrees. Then one day I noticed inside the case that the NB fan had died and when I touched the heatsink, it was burning hot. I set out to buy a good performing NB replacement and the 3rd previously unknown temperature then dropped to 31. This led me to believe that there is in fact a sensor for Northbridge, but that's just my personal experience, take what you want from it. 
How about try blowing a house fan directly into your case and if that 3rd temperature drops, then it proves the existence of a 3rd sensor *somewhere*, because it's active. And I'm willing to put my money on the NB.
Last edited by Cafe_333; Nov 28th, 2005 at 03:19 AM.
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Nov 28th, 2005 12:39 PM
#14
As a note, pretty much all Motherboard, CPU, GPU, etc. temperature monitors can vary widely in readings, even from the same model to model.
It's common to see +-20 degrees celsius to actual temperatures.
Temperature monitors are only really reliable for measuring temperature changes ie: it went from 30 to 50..
Comparing board to board, especially from different manufacturers is genereally meaningless.
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Nov 28th, 2005 03:24 PM
#15
While I do agree that sensors from different boards may vary to an extent, a 20 degree variance in temperatures is pretty out there... in my experience, sensors are pretty close regardless of motherboard - but that's just me...
Last edited by Cafe_333; Nov 28th, 2005 at 03:27 PM.
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