They use "Distance to TJmax" which is an estimated temperature based on a thermal diode and a formula. ![]() The FX series AM3 and AM3+ platform don't use a normal thermal monitoring solution like Intel or like the newer Ryzen processors. And in this case, on THAT platform, you can't look at any "temps" because none of them will be correct. There is only ONE answer that matters, and that is the right one. TP-Link AX6600 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6 Wireless Gigabit Router, Other Info: My System is the ULTIMATE GAMING RIG ^_^ Internet Speed: 900Mbps Download, 20Mbps UploadĪntivirus: n/a aka "ABOVE TOP SECRET!" lol ) Hard Drives: 1TB Samsug Evo 970 (NVMe)(SSD)ġx 2TB Western Digital Black (Sata 3)(6Gb/s)(7200rpm)(5 year)ġx 1TB Western Digital Black (Sata 3)(6Gb/s)(7200rpm)(5 year) PSU: Thermaltake TOUGHPOWER DPS G RGB Titanium Certified 1250WattĬase: Corsair Graphite Series 780T Full Tower PC CaseĬooling: AMD Wraith cooler (stock) & 3x Corsair case fans Mouse: Redragon M602 RGB Wired USB Gaming mouse Keyboard: Alienware Low Profile RGB Mechanical USB Gaming Keyboard - AW510K - Lunar Light Screen Resolution: 1920x1080p at 165Hz (16:9 Aspect Ratio) Monitor(s) Displays: 24" DELL Gaming Monitor - G2422HS - DisplayPort used Sound Card: Realtek® ALC1220A 8-Channel High Definition Audio CODEC Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 Ti 8GB ACX model by EVGA Motherboard: Asus PRIME X570-PRO (BIOS_r4403 ) System Manufacturer/Model Number: (custom-build)(June 2020) Here's a Speccy screenshot of my old FX-8350, taken in 2015. It's probably and old version of Speccy as well.įor some reason, the newer versions of the temp monitoring programs, don't show the same thing. it's to prove to Lance1, that his FX-9590 is not really running at 2C like Speccy is showing. It was taken in 2014, with AIDA64 Extreme, version Īs for why I am "fixated" on this. That screenshot in post #37 is of the FX 8350. It depends on which version of these monitoring programs you are using. It is higher that "CPU Diode" because it has no direct cooling like the CPU itself does. Like I said previously the temperature called "CPU" is from a sensor on the motherboard underneath the CPU socket. He has since corrected that error and replaced this with CPU Diode.Įven if you used the old version of AIDA that had individual core temps then you would just have 8 identical readings of the same CPU Diode sensor. ![]() That was simply a misunderstanding by the developer for AIDA of AMD FX CPUs back then. It makes no difference that an old version of AIDA shows individual core temps. The FX-8350 only has one internal sensor for the CPU temperature. There are no individual core temps for the FX-8350. So these are the symptoms and the possible causes, what do you guys think? Also my friend who helped me assemble it says that I should apply cooling paste to the CPU which I'm going to do today after work.I don't understand why you are fixated on core temps. I'm not tech savvy, my friends helped me pick the parts and assemble my PC so my drivers are not up to date at all, my bios wasn't updated since I bought my PC (2,5 years ago), and in the recent weeks a malware got onto my pc which I (really hope) removed since then. My CPU is an: AMD FX X8 8350, 4000MHz, 8Mb, socket AM3+, with a Wraith Cooler I browsed a couple of tech forums and found out hat CPU's shouldn't reach 90+☌, and mine was at 180☌ (allegedly). I also made a little test, while running Witcher 3, I looked at my CPU fan, GPU fans, and every other fan in the PC also I checked my monitoring program and allegedly my CPU was at 150-160☌. Yesterday I checked my cooler fans and everyone of them was working perfectly. Hey guys, a couple of days ago my PC shut down itself due to high CPU temperatures, more precisely after I rebooted my pc the boot menu showed 180 ° C.
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