Cybermonkey
Member
Registered: 22nd Sep 02
Location: Sydney, Australia
User status: Offline
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saying that, a computer using 100% of the CPU over a long period of time should not heat to such extremes
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Cybermonkey
Member
Registered: 22nd Sep 02
Location: Sydney, Australia
User status: Offline
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oh yeah, also just check what is taking 100% of the cpu time, the process should be listed in the task manager...
ps, do you watch large AVI files?
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Russ
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Registered: 14th Mar 04
Location: Armchair
User status: Offline
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if you only have 2 fans, and its a cheap shit case im not surprised, i have 4 case fanfs, cpu and gpu hsf's and a fan to cool hdd's and mine still gets toasty, if it an amd xp cpu i shouldnt worry to much though.
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Cybermonkey
Member
Registered: 22nd Sep 02
Location: Sydney, Australia
User status: Offline
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87 degrees on an AMD is still waaaay too hot, enough to damage it. my computer actually shuts down at 80 to prevent damage. i get alarms at 65 and 75... i have a shit case, fan at the front, fan at the back, decent hsf on CPU and fan on GPU
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WATSON
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Registered: 16th Jun 05
Location: Fife, Scotland
User status: Offline
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With the case off i have noticed a big diff heat wise But still running around the 701/80temp wise some times
Have been on ebay ect looking at heatsinks will get a new one of them and get new fans to replace old ones and get some extra then see how it goes from there
going to do fresh install of windows XP when i can find my internet disk cant find it anywhere
Is it safe to run with the case off?
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Bart
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Registered: 19th Aug 02
Location: Midsomer Norton, Bristol Avon
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Cybermonkey
87 degrees on an AMD is still waaaay too hot, enough to damage it. my computer actually shuts down at 80 to prevent damage. i get alarms at 65 and 75... i have a shit case, fan at the front, fan at the back, decent hsf on CPU and fan on GPU
not if its two years old.. older CPUs ran closer to 100C.
you definatly shouldnt have 100% CPU usage going on.
download Hijack This which details what processes are running.
run the file, and save it to a log file on your desktop.
then go to This website upload your log file and it will tell you if anything bad is running, which you can unload using the hijack program.
its a very handy little program. if you also wanted me to take a look at the log file email me it barteh@gmail.com
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Dom
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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like said, look in your processes and see whats causing the cpu to max out - then uninstall it or run a reg cleaner to disable it etc Though it sounds like spyware or a dodgy piece of software!
As for heatsinks, if you have an AMD XP processor then i would recommend the thermalright SI-97 and a Y-tech 90mm fan - processor only ever gets to 50c on extremly hot days
p.s - also there is the si-120 (which i believe fits amd XP/socket A) systems but requires you to buy a 120mm fan!
[Edited on 18-06-2006 by Dom]
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Cybermonkey
Member
Registered: 22nd Sep 02
Location: Sydney, Australia
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Bart
quote: Originally posted by Cybermonkey
87 degrees on an AMD is still waaaay too hot, enough to damage it. my computer actually shuts down at 80 to prevent damage. i get alarms at 65 and 75... i have a shit case, fan at the front, fan at the back, decent hsf on CPU and fan on GPU
not if its two years old.. older CPUs ran closer to 100C.
you definatly shouldnt have 100% CPU usage going on.
download Hijack This which details what processes are running.
run the file, and save it to a log file on your desktop.
then go to This website upload your log file and it will tell you if anything bad is running, which you can unload using the hijack program.
its a very handy little program. if you also wanted me to take a look at the log file email me it barteh@gmail.com
mine is 4 years old and runs around the 40degree mark, 50 in australian hot temps
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