Hw temp

Author: m | 2025-04-25

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The temp at the boiler is your primary setting (as you’ve established, will effect the temp of the radiators to touch) I would say anything between 60 to 70 should be sufficient. The higher it’s set the quicker the hw cylinder should get to temp. It shouldn’t effect the hw temp though as that is regulated by the cylinder stat. Running nvidia-smi -q on the A4000s. Temperature GPU Current Temp : 53 C GPU T.Limit Temp : N/A GPU Shutdown Temp : 103 C GPU Slowdown Temp : 100 C GPU Max Operating Temp : 98 C GPU Target Temperature : 90 C. According to the nvidia-smi documentation, HW Slowdown HW Slowdown (reducing the core clocks by a factor of 2

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HW TEMPS INC Company Profile

Dell optiplex 745 changing fan speed Thread starter Thread starter Skywalker7 Start date Start date Sep 11, 2013 You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. #1 I have dell optiplev 745(core2duo 2.13;2gb Ram;80gb WD800JD)...I've installed speedfan,but it doesn't recognise any of my fans(on cpu and HDD) and I want to change speed of HDD fan...How can I do that??? ryan27968 Sep 11, 2013 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #2 you need a more recent pc to do this with 4 pin pwm fans. you can monitor the speed of them if you want with hwmonitor. #3 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #4 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #5 remember to choose best answer #6 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. remember to choose best answer thnx man.... Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #8 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. I was able to so this with speedfan with no problem! I just went into options and stumbled upon a checkbox that allows for compatibility with not only dell notebooks as the checkbox claims...it works across almost every dell computer, desktop OR laptop! Even though my speedfan is too messed up to use the CPU fan any more, and i am too lazy to re-install speedfan, it worked up until i had to re-install my O.S. without any problems. #9 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change How accurate is Speccy in terms of temp readings? Thread starter Thread starter smokeybravo Start date Start date Feb 5, 2013 You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. #1 ASRock Extreme tuning utility is showing my CPU temp at 25C idle, while Speccy is showing 43C >_>I just installed a Cooler Master Gemini II cooler and before I was getting about 50C idle in both programs with the stock cooler. satyamdubey Feb 5, 2013 The temps are read at three places usually. One is on motherboard below the cpu socket. there's temp diodes for the cores and temp diodes for IHS (integrated heat spreader, the HSF sits on this).cpu package temps seem higher than core temps and this is because the package temp is read at the mobo socket and is warmer. the temp diode at the IHS-HSF contact will read the least temp as that dissipates the heat fastest.the most important temp is the core temp. the further you are from reaching it's threshold the cooler you are running. Oct 30, 2011 3,719 0 23,460 #3 Check using realtemp and coretmep as wellI find that speccy gets the same numbers as coretemp on my builds and it matches with my MSI ultitiesNot sure if speccy records the core temp or package tmep #4 I tried HW Monitor and it's telling me the package temp is 43C. What's the difference between the core temp and the package temp, and is that low enough? Thanks in advance. Jun 19, 2012 1,345 2 19,665 #5 The temps are read at three places usually. One is on motherboard below the cpu socket. there's temp diodes for the cores and temp diodes for IHS (integrated heat spreader, the HSF sits on this).cpu package temps seem higher than core temps and this is because the package temp is read at the mobo socket and is warmer. the temp diode at the IHS-HSF contact will read the least temp as that dissipates the heat fastest.the most important temp is the core temp. the further you are from reaching it's threshold the cooler you are running. #6 Best answer selected by smokeybravo. Advertising Cookies Policies Privacy Term & Conditions Topics

HW Temp Proxies go to the Movies - Studocu

I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2419 — 16 MHz MCU with 128KB FRAM, 2KB SRAM, ESI, LCD, AES, 12-bit ADC, comparator, DMA,UART/SPI/I2C,timer MSP430F247 — 16 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2471 — 16 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F248 — 16 MHz MCU with 48KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2481 — 16 MHz MCU with 48KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F249 — 16 MHz MCU with 60KB Flash, 2KB SRAM, 12-Bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F249-EP — Enhanced Product 16-bit Ultra-Low-Power Microcontroller, 60KB Flash, 2KB RAM, 12-Bit ADC, 2 USCIs, MSP430F2491 — 16 MHz MCU with 60KB Flash, 2KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2616 — 16 MHz MCU with 92KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2617 — 16 MHz MCU with 92KB Flash, 8KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2618 — 16 MHz MCU with 116KB FLASH, 8KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2619 — 16 MHz MCU with 120KB FLASH, 4KB SRAM, AES, 12-bit ADC, comparator, DMA, UART/SPI/I2C, timer MSP430F2619S-HT — High Temp 16-Bit Ultra-Low-Power MCU, 120KB Flash, 4KB RAM, 12-Bit ADC, Dual DAC, 2 USCI,HW Mult,DMA MSP430F412 — 8 MHz MCU with 4KB Flash, 256B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F413 — 8 MHz MCU with 8KB Flash, 256B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F4132 — 8 MHz MCU with 8KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 10-bit ADC, I2C/SPI/UART, comparator, 144 seg LCD MSP430F415 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F4152 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 10-bit ADC, I2C/SPI/UART, comparator, 144 seg LCD MSP430F417 — 8 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 1KB SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F423 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 8KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F423A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 8KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F425 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 512B RAM MSP430F4250 — 8-MHz Sensing MCU with 1 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F425A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 512B RAM MSP430F4260 — 8-MHz Sensing MCU with 1 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 24KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F427 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 1KB RAM MSP430F4270 — 8-MHz sensing MCU with 1 16-bit sigma-delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F427A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 1KB RAM MSP430F435 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, SPI/UART, 160 seg LCD MSP430F4351 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, comparator, SPI/UART, 160 seg LCD MSP430F436. The temp at the boiler is your primary setting (as you’ve established, will effect the temp of the radiators to touch) I would say anything between 60 to 70 should be sufficient. The higher it’s set the quicker the hw cylinder should get to temp. It shouldn’t effect the hw temp though as that is regulated by the cylinder stat.

Temp and fan rpm's on cpuid hw monitor

Still the red-line? I don't mind investing in an after-market cooler, but I'd like to be able to tell whether or not one is needed first. Thanks! #5 The stock cooler is fine. The problem is likely to be the motherboard getting the wrong temp (this is especially prevalent on ASRock mobos). Check the mobo disc for a tuning program and it'll give you the correct temps. #6 Thanks, everyone! Here's a bit more information about my setup. The motherboard is an MSI FM2-A75MA-E35, and I'm running Ubuntu 13.04 (for now, at least). I spent about an hour trying get the core temp in the OS, but as far as I can tell, my HW is not currently supported (hooray for open source!). I'll try a few other distros later and see if I have better luck. I'm planning on switching to Windows, but haven't decided between OEM and retail. Right now I'm taking solace in the fact that I could use the system for about an hour without any glitches, shutdowns, or magic smoke!I was actually rather impressed with the stock cooler. The thermal material was laid out in a fine grid with each section neatly spaced by bare metal. This gave it just enough room to spread with the pressure from installing the heatsink, leaving a nice, thin, even coat. There's a really good comparison between different ways to apply thermal paste here (page 3 shows a pea on a heatsink). Unfortunately, if I do go after-market, I'll Any board that supports overclocking from any maker, the warranty does not cover damages caused by overclocking. And high temps (even if not extreme) over long periods of time can increase aging of any electronics.My mistake earlier - TMPIN2 is the normally the chipset temp, not CPU. A fan over the chipset may help, but you still need to extract that heat from the case. And again, at this point, we don't know if that is at idle, or full load. If full load, 67°C is not bad.I also would not put total faith in one hw monitoring program. I would want to know what HWiNFO64 says. I don't care what the board "supports" that is a 4 phase 760G based motherboard that can't even handle a stock 8350. He currently has an FX6350 installed which is a 125w CPU as well. This out of the box is the maximum that motherboard supports. The likely hood it survives any period of time with an overclocked 6 core under load is slim to non-existent. You are welcome to argue all you want however you are just plain wrong. Ummm, where did you see which processor he has? All I see is FX but there are many. It's an FX6350 look a little harder. #10 That was temp under load (prime95). While playing tmpin2 gets to ~72. I now have an artic freezer pro 7 rev2. Tried to OC my fx to 4.3ghz, everything ran stable, but i got a bit worried,

Hot spot temps in HW info - Overclock.net

New core and skin engine libraries with better extendibilityIs there any place I can download 3.0.0 beta ? MSI's official AfterBurner website doesn't offer the 3.0.0 beta download, yet. Unwinder 2013-02-25 06:41 Is there any place I can download 3.0.0 beta ? MSI's official AfterBurner website doesn't offer the 3.0.0 beta download, yet.No, it is not public yet. Unwinder 2013-02-25 07:01 Some more news on 3.0.0:During the last few days we were chatting with my old good friend W1zzard (Sapphire Trixx developer) about the situation with display flickering after applying unofficial overclocking via MSI Afterburner or Sapphire Trixx on the latest Catalyst drivers. Sadly, the issue was introduced more than half year ago in Catalyst 12.6 and AMD don't plan to do anything to fix it. Comments given by company reps on the issue are just ridiculous, and I'm afraid that with such attitude to testing it will never be fixed. Happily, as many users noticed, flickering totally disappears after togging display mode (e.g. after switching desktop resolution), so we see no other choices but using it as workaround in our tools. So new Afterburner will have an option allowing it to forcibly reset display mode after applying unoffficial OC. Trixx will most likely do the same. Unwinder 2013-03-02 07:40 Blue and red editions of skins are no longer updated and shipped with application. All new hw features like power limit and temp limit for Titans are being added to default and default big skins only. Unwinder 2013-03-02 12:20 Not

HW Monitor (what is node 0?) / Core Temp - which is the accurate temp

On your Northbridge.agreedput a fan to directly blow air on the northbridge. Directly over mosfets... #6 What is the point , 4.2GHz is the turbo speed of FX 6350 #7 I wouldn't overclock that CPU on that motherboard if you want that motherboard to last any length of time. Sure, you can overclock on that board no problem - as long as you watch your temps, as you are doing. That board was designed to support overclocking with the proper CPU. Now it is not an extremist board so don't go too far. But I note that board supports EC AOD-ACC and Gigabyte's own EasyTune6.That said, as with any board that supports overclocking from any maker, the warranty does not cover damages caused by overclocking. And high temps (even if not extreme) over long periods of time can increase aging of any electronics.My mistake earlier - TMPIN2 is the normally the chipset temp, not CPU. A fan over the chipset may help, but you still need to extract that heat from the case. And again, at this point, we don't know if that is at idle, or full load. If full load, 67°C is not bad.I also would not put total faith in one hw monitoring program. I would want to know what HWiNFO64 says. What is the point , 4.2GHz is the turbo speed Ummm, where did you see which processor he has? All I see is FX but there are many. #8 Sure, you can overclock on that. The temp at the boiler is your primary setting (as you’ve established, will effect the temp of the radiators to touch) I would say anything between 60 to 70 should be sufficient. The higher it’s set the quicker the hw cylinder should get to temp. It shouldn’t effect the hw temp though as that is regulated by the cylinder stat. Running nvidia-smi -q on the A4000s. Temperature GPU Current Temp : 53 C GPU T.Limit Temp : N/A GPU Shutdown Temp : 103 C GPU Slowdown Temp : 100 C GPU Max Operating Temp : 98 C GPU Target Temperature : 90 C. According to the nvidia-smi documentation, HW Slowdown HW Slowdown (reducing the core clocks by a factor of 2

HW Temp Proxies go to the Movies.docx - Course Hero

Board no problem - as long as you watch your temps, as you are doing. That board was designed to support overclocking with the proper CPU. Now it is not an extremist board so don't go too far. But I note that board supports EC AOD-ACC and Gigabyte's own EasyTune6.That said, as with any board that supports overclocking from any maker, the warranty does not cover damages caused by overclocking. And high temps (even if not extreme) over long periods of time can increase aging of any electronics.My mistake earlier - TMPIN2 is the normally the chipset temp, not CPU. A fan over the chipset may help, but you still need to extract that heat from the case. And again, at this point, we don't know if that is at idle, or full load. If full load, 67°C is not bad.I also would not put total faith in one hw monitoring program. I would want to know what HWiNFO64 says.Ummm, where did you see which processor he has? All I see is FX but there are many. the right panel . 125W TDP cdawall where the hell are my stars #9 Sure, you can overclock on that board no problem - as long as you watch your temps, as you are doing. That board was designed to support overclocking with the proper CPU. Now it is not an extremist board so don't go too far. But I note that board supports EC AOD-ACC and Gigabyte's own EasyTune6.That said, as with

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User5348

Dell optiplex 745 changing fan speed Thread starter Thread starter Skywalker7 Start date Start date Sep 11, 2013 You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. #1 I have dell optiplev 745(core2duo 2.13;2gb Ram;80gb WD800JD)...I've installed speedfan,but it doesn't recognise any of my fans(on cpu and HDD) and I want to change speed of HDD fan...How can I do that??? ryan27968 Sep 11, 2013 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #2 you need a more recent pc to do this with 4 pin pwm fans. you can monitor the speed of them if you want with hwmonitor. #3 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #4 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #5 remember to choose best answer #6 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. remember to choose best answer thnx man.... Apr 25, 2013 834 0 11,360 #8 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change anything!!And I've register,HDD temp is 40C....is that to high cause I'm just using internet? you will not be able to change anything. your pc is too old. you need a newer pc to be able to change fan speed. 40 degrees is perfectly fine for a hard drive. I was able to so this with speedfan with no problem! I just went into options and stumbled upon a checkbox that allows for compatibility with not only dell notebooks as the checkbox claims...it works across almost every dell computer, desktop OR laptop! Even though my speedfan is too messed up to use the CPU fan any more, and i am too lazy to re-install speedfan, it worked up until i had to re-install my O.S. without any problems. #9 ok,I've done it...but HW monitor still doesn't allows me to change

2025-04-19
User9141

How accurate is Speccy in terms of temp readings? Thread starter Thread starter smokeybravo Start date Start date Feb 5, 2013 You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. #1 ASRock Extreme tuning utility is showing my CPU temp at 25C idle, while Speccy is showing 43C >_>I just installed a Cooler Master Gemini II cooler and before I was getting about 50C idle in both programs with the stock cooler. satyamdubey Feb 5, 2013 The temps are read at three places usually. One is on motherboard below the cpu socket. there's temp diodes for the cores and temp diodes for IHS (integrated heat spreader, the HSF sits on this).cpu package temps seem higher than core temps and this is because the package temp is read at the mobo socket and is warmer. the temp diode at the IHS-HSF contact will read the least temp as that dissipates the heat fastest.the most important temp is the core temp. the further you are from reaching it's threshold the cooler you are running. Oct 30, 2011 3,719 0 23,460 #3 Check using realtemp and coretmep as wellI find that speccy gets the same numbers as coretemp on my builds and it matches with my MSI ultitiesNot sure if speccy records the core temp or package tmep #4 I tried HW Monitor and it's telling me the package temp is 43C. What's the difference between the core temp and the package temp, and is that low enough? Thanks in advance. Jun 19, 2012 1,345 2 19,665 #5 The temps are read at three places usually. One is on motherboard below the cpu socket. there's temp diodes for the cores and temp diodes for IHS (integrated heat spreader, the HSF sits on this).cpu package temps seem higher than core temps and this is because the package temp is read at the mobo socket and is warmer. the temp diode at the IHS-HSF contact will read the least temp as that dissipates the heat fastest.the most important temp is the core temp. the further you are from reaching it's threshold the cooler you are running. #6 Best answer selected by smokeybravo. Advertising Cookies Policies Privacy Term & Conditions Topics

2025-04-23
User1186

I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2419 — 16 MHz MCU with 128KB FRAM, 2KB SRAM, ESI, LCD, AES, 12-bit ADC, comparator, DMA,UART/SPI/I2C,timer MSP430F247 — 16 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2471 — 16 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F248 — 16 MHz MCU with 48KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2481 — 16 MHz MCU with 48KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F249 — 16 MHz MCU with 60KB Flash, 2KB SRAM, 12-Bit ADC, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F249-EP — Enhanced Product 16-bit Ultra-Low-Power Microcontroller, 60KB Flash, 2KB RAM, 12-Bit ADC, 2 USCIs, MSP430F2491 — 16 MHz MCU with 60KB Flash, 2KB SRAM, comparator, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier MSP430F2616 — 16 MHz MCU with 92KB Flash, 4KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2617 — 16 MHz MCU with 92KB Flash, 8KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2618 — 16 MHz MCU with 116KB FLASH, 8KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC, Dual 12-bit DAC, I2C/SPI/UART, HW multiplier, DMA MSP430F2619 — 16 MHz MCU with 120KB FLASH, 4KB SRAM, AES, 12-bit ADC, comparator, DMA, UART/SPI/I2C, timer MSP430F2619S-HT — High Temp 16-Bit Ultra-Low-Power MCU, 120KB Flash, 4KB RAM, 12-Bit ADC, Dual DAC, 2 USCI,HW Mult,DMA MSP430F412 — 8 MHz MCU with 4KB Flash, 256B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F413 — 8 MHz MCU with 8KB Flash, 256B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F4132 — 8 MHz MCU with 8KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 10-bit ADC, I2C/SPI/UART, comparator, 144 seg LCD MSP430F415 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F4152 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 10-bit ADC, I2C/SPI/UART, comparator, 144 seg LCD MSP430F417 — 8 MHz MCU with 32KB Flash, 1KB SRAM, timer, comparator, 96 seg LCD MSP430F423 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 8KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F423A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 8KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F425 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 512B RAM MSP430F4250 — 8-MHz Sensing MCU with 1 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F425A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 16KB Flash, 512B RAM MSP430F4260 — 8-MHz Sensing MCU with 1 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 24KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F427 — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 1KB RAM MSP430F4270 — 8-MHz sensing MCU with 1 16-bit sigma-delta ADC, 12-bit DAC, 56-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 256B RAM MSP430F427A — 8 MHz sensing MCU with 3 16-bit Sigma-Delta ADCs, 128-segment LCD, 32KB Flash, 1KB RAM MSP430F435 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, 12-bit ADC, comparator, SPI/UART, 160 seg LCD MSP430F4351 — 8 MHz MCU with 16KB Flash, 512B SRAM, comparator, SPI/UART, 160 seg LCD MSP430F436

2025-03-30
User9700

Still the red-line? I don't mind investing in an after-market cooler, but I'd like to be able to tell whether or not one is needed first. Thanks! #5 The stock cooler is fine. The problem is likely to be the motherboard getting the wrong temp (this is especially prevalent on ASRock mobos). Check the mobo disc for a tuning program and it'll give you the correct temps. #6 Thanks, everyone! Here's a bit more information about my setup. The motherboard is an MSI FM2-A75MA-E35, and I'm running Ubuntu 13.04 (for now, at least). I spent about an hour trying get the core temp in the OS, but as far as I can tell, my HW is not currently supported (hooray for open source!). I'll try a few other distros later and see if I have better luck. I'm planning on switching to Windows, but haven't decided between OEM and retail. Right now I'm taking solace in the fact that I could use the system for about an hour without any glitches, shutdowns, or magic smoke!I was actually rather impressed with the stock cooler. The thermal material was laid out in a fine grid with each section neatly spaced by bare metal. This gave it just enough room to spread with the pressure from installing the heatsink, leaving a nice, thin, even coat. There's a really good comparison between different ways to apply thermal paste here (page 3 shows a pea on a heatsink). Unfortunately, if I do go after-market, I'll

2025-04-11
User5688

Any board that supports overclocking from any maker, the warranty does not cover damages caused by overclocking. And high temps (even if not extreme) over long periods of time can increase aging of any electronics.My mistake earlier - TMPIN2 is the normally the chipset temp, not CPU. A fan over the chipset may help, but you still need to extract that heat from the case. And again, at this point, we don't know if that is at idle, or full load. If full load, 67°C is not bad.I also would not put total faith in one hw monitoring program. I would want to know what HWiNFO64 says. I don't care what the board "supports" that is a 4 phase 760G based motherboard that can't even handle a stock 8350. He currently has an FX6350 installed which is a 125w CPU as well. This out of the box is the maximum that motherboard supports. The likely hood it survives any period of time with an overclocked 6 core under load is slim to non-existent. You are welcome to argue all you want however you are just plain wrong. Ummm, where did you see which processor he has? All I see is FX but there are many. It's an FX6350 look a little harder. #10 That was temp under load (prime95). While playing tmpin2 gets to ~72. I now have an artic freezer pro 7 rev2. Tried to OC my fx to 4.3ghz, everything ran stable, but i got a bit worried,

2025-03-29
User4412

New core and skin engine libraries with better extendibilityIs there any place I can download 3.0.0 beta ? MSI's official AfterBurner website doesn't offer the 3.0.0 beta download, yet. Unwinder 2013-02-25 06:41 Is there any place I can download 3.0.0 beta ? MSI's official AfterBurner website doesn't offer the 3.0.0 beta download, yet.No, it is not public yet. Unwinder 2013-02-25 07:01 Some more news on 3.0.0:During the last few days we were chatting with my old good friend W1zzard (Sapphire Trixx developer) about the situation with display flickering after applying unofficial overclocking via MSI Afterburner or Sapphire Trixx on the latest Catalyst drivers. Sadly, the issue was introduced more than half year ago in Catalyst 12.6 and AMD don't plan to do anything to fix it. Comments given by company reps on the issue are just ridiculous, and I'm afraid that with such attitude to testing it will never be fixed. Happily, as many users noticed, flickering totally disappears after togging display mode (e.g. after switching desktop resolution), so we see no other choices but using it as workaround in our tools. So new Afterburner will have an option allowing it to forcibly reset display mode after applying unoffficial OC. Trixx will most likely do the same. Unwinder 2013-03-02 07:40 Blue and red editions of skins are no longer updated and shipped with application. All new hw features like power limit and temp limit for Titans are being added to default and default big skins only. Unwinder 2013-03-02 12:20 Not

2025-04-23

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