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#1
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Idle temps for 2.4c
I just built two computers for my church's office, and am wondering if
the coolers are working properly. One CPU is running in the 90'sF, the other around 110 degrees. This is before any software install- I was just in the bios to set up boot devices. Is this a normal temp, or is something wrong? I do plan to attempt overclocking, so would there be an advantage to using Arctic Silver on the retail box cooler? If so, do I need to scrape the stuff off that is there now? thanks. |
#2
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My 2.4 is at 37C-100F right now. OC'd to 2.7
Cooly jester_s1 wrote: I just built two computers for my church's office, and am wondering if the coolers are working properly. One CPU is running in the 90'sF, the other around 110 degrees. This is before any software install- I was just in the bios to set up boot devices. Is this a normal temp, or is something wrong? I do plan to attempt overclocking, so would there be an advantage to using Arctic Silver on the retail box cooler? If so, do I need to scrape the stuff off that is there now? thanks. |
#3
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"Cooly" wrote in message
news:JDBId.2490$A_.2301@okepread03... My 2.4 is at 37C-100F right now. OC'd to 2.7 Cooly jester_s1 wrote: I just built two computers for my church's office, and am wondering if the coolers are working properly. One CPU is running in the 90'sF, the other around 110 degrees. This is before any software install- I was just in the bios to set up boot devices. Is this a normal temp, or is something wrong? I do plan to attempt overclocking, so would there be an advantage to using Arctic Silver on the retail box cooler? If so, do I need to scrape the stuff off that is there now? thanks. Hm? Mine idles near to room temp. I don't know. My Xeon stays around 35 & 36 C on Idle. Denny. ;-) :-) |
#4
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The idle temperature for a Pentium 4 2.4C, when using Windows 2000
Professional or Windows XP should be about the same temperature as the air inside the system case. When at idle using these operating systems the CPU is issued a series of low power consumption instructions and dissipates only a few watts of heat. The important temperature for the CPU is the temperature under load, though the idle temperature can be of diagnostic use. Without knowing the 'under load' temperature and the room ambient air temperature it is impossible to suggest more than that the air flow through your system case may be poor. -- Phil Weldon, pweldonatmindjumpdotcom For communication, replace "at" with the 'at sign' replace "mindjump" with "mindspring." replace "dot" with "." "jester_s1" wrote in message ... I just built two computers for my church's office, and am wondering if the coolers are working properly. One CPU is running in the 90'sF, the other around 110 degrees. This is before any software install- I was just in the bios to set up boot devices. Is this a normal temp, or is something wrong? I do plan to attempt overclocking, so would there be an advantage to using Arctic Silver on the retail box cooler? If so, do I need to scrape the stuff off that is there now? thanks. |
#5
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The case temp was 75 degrees. The idle temp I was talking about was
just from looking at the bios with no OS installed yet. Any ideas about using the thermal grease on the boxed cooler? It's a pain to take the heatsinks off again to apply it but I can if I need to. |
#6
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The case temp was 75 degrees. The idle temp I was talking about was
just from looking at the bios with no OS installed yet. Any ideas about using the thermal grease on the boxed cooler? It's a pain to take the heatsinks off again to apply it but I can if I need to. |
#7
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"jester_s1" wrote in message
... The case temp was 75 degrees. The idle temp I was talking about was just from looking at the bios with no OS installed yet. Any ideas about using the thermal grease on the boxed cooler? It's a pain to take the heatsinks off again to apply it but I can if I need to. There's many things to consider here. Listen to "Phil Weldon" 2. For a P4C, that's Very hot. Mine runs around 21-23 C Idle with a room temp of 74ºF My P4 gets up to about 39 or 43ºC Under load. My Xeon's I already said about, Temps are anywhere from 35-36 & up to about 48C CPU1 And 53C CPU2 SmartFan kicks in @ right about these temps, and it goes down a little. Try and reseat us CPU. Maybe even do what u suggested, go back to stock cooling. Those thermal pads do seem to do the job well enough. Denny. ;-) :-) |
#8
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"jester_s1" wrote
The case temp was 75 degrees. The idle temp I was talking about was just from looking at the bios with no OS installed yet. Any ideas about using the thermal grease on the boxed cooler? It's a pain to take the heatsinks off again to apply it but I can if I need to. I assume you meant to reply to my post, but instead replied to your own. I should have realized you hadn't yet installed an operating system, so the special low power instructions would not be issued. Do you have the boxed, retail Intel CPU that comes with the Intel heatsink, fan, and thermal pad? Or a third party heatsink/fan with thermal pad? In either case, if you have installed the heatsink/fan with a thermal pad, you should leave that in place, at least until you can test the systems under load, with the operating systems installed. The CPU temperature reported by the BIOS is fairly useless since you don't see it under real operating conditions. The 35 degrees C ( 95 F) temperature the BIOS reports is certainly no danger to the CPU, and Intel CPUs have good protection against overheating... while they may get hot enough to temporarily lock up, they are not allow to get hot enough for damage to occur. [The Pentium 4 C CPUs throttle down as the internal CPU temperature increases above a limit set inside the CPU, then, ultimately, are shut down by an internal diode sensor.] AFTER you have installed the operating system, install a temperature applet like MotherBoard Monitor so that you can read the CPU and motherboard temperature while the system is running applications. You will likely find that the motherboard temperature is between 30 and 35 degrees C unless you have heroic case ventilation, while the CPU temperature will vary between 30 degrees C (idle) and 55 degrees C underload. Unless you plan to attempt overclocking, as long as your CPU temperature (under load) is under 60 degrees C, there is no reason to worry about your CPU cooling. Your fan may be temperature controlled, so, in the interest of reducing noise, the fan may not even operate at temperatures as low as 35 degrees C, or, at least, may run at low speed. If you are able to begin installation of an operating system, but not complete the installation, a faulty CPU cooling setup would be ONE of the possible causes (along with possible problems with other components such as power supply, memory, case cooling, etc.) -- Phil Weldon, pweldonatmindjumpdotcom For communication, replace "at" with the 'at sign' replace "mindjump" with "mindspring." replace "dot" with "." "jester_s1" wrote in message ... The case temp was 75 degrees. The idle temp I was talking about was just from looking at the bios with no OS installed yet. Any ideas about using the thermal grease on the boxed cooler? It's a pain to take the heatsinks off again to apply it but I can if I need to. |
#9
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I'll reseat them and see what happens. I didn't use the grease yet
because the stock cooler had the gummy stuff on it already. Any suggestions for seating technique? The last system I built was a slot 1 PII, which came already put together. Thanks for the info so far. |
#10
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Thanks for the help, Phil.
I am using the boxed Intel cooler. The fan was running around 2300 rpm when I checked the temp. I'll leave it alone until I get the OS installed and can monitor the temp under load. I am planning to OC the processor if I can get stable operation from it. I see little reason not to take advantage of the free speed if I can do so at no cost. |
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