Originally posted by: MS Dawn
TAT is not recommended for long use as it can damage the cpu. It does not check for errors - it's essentially blowtorching the cpu and (especially with overclocked and overvolted systems) you're relying on the motherboard safeguards (if any exist hehe) to shut the system down when pushed too far.
The Prime95 SMP version using small FFT will produce more heat than any real world app and does error checking.
You may want to check out a new program called OCCT. It will test most systems in 30 minutes.
OCCT
Also there's this thread:
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Originally posted by: MichaelD
I honestly didn't know any of that, MS Dawn. I learned something today. I thought it was a "Prime95/Orthos type program" Thanks for saving the OP from potentially frying his CPU and educating ME in the process.
I WAS right about one thing though; "I've never seen any other benchmark program put a heat load on a CPU like TAT does."
Cheers. :beer:
Originally posted by: MichaelD
OCCT is pretty nifty...I'm running the 30 min test right now. Is it based on P95 or other existing tool, or did the guy write it himself? Interface is different...nice.![]()
Originally posted by: nova2
so theres a prime95 ver that tests multi-core / multi-CPU systems?
so I'm guessing its the same version that requires you run multiple instances of prime95 and then set the affinity?
Originally posted by: xtknight
Using Folding to test an OC probably isn't the best idea. What if it sends the project corrupted data? Try 3DMark with CPU Burn In (affinity: core 2).
Originally posted by: MS Dawn
Originally posted by: MichaelD
I honestly didn't know any of that, MS Dawn. I learned something today. I thought it was a "Prime95/Orthos type program" Thanks for saving the OP from potentially frying his CPU and educating ME in the process.
I WAS right about one thing though; "I've never seen any other benchmark program put a heat load on a CPU like TAT does."
Cheers. :beer:
Yeah it's essentially a leaked program for mobile computing manufacturers. These platforms have the most challenging cooling designs.
It's a good program to see if your thermal system will go past its limits in the absolute worst case scenario.
Quad core isn't supported and the scary thing is the temps (on the qx6700 cpu) are quite high with just TWO of the FOUR cores getting the iron. :shocked:
But yeah if you have a warped IHS or bad TIM install you will see it with TAT. And TAT's a fact. :laugh:
