XP 2700+ Tbred temps

Shenkoa

Golden Member
Jul 27, 2004
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Idle at 40C,Max temp is 47C. I dont think this is healthy at all, does any one agree?

Ambiant temps are very high, 46C is what AIDA32 is reading.

Mobo is a shuttle MATX Nforce 2 board
RAM is Corsair PC 3200
case is a mid atx pos powmax with 2 fan's, 1 in and 1 out.
 

fibes

Senior member
Jul 19, 2003
833
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I think those temps are fine. I've been running 47c idle on my LanBoy system for about 2 years now and I have not had any problems.
 

BlueWeasel

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
15,944
475
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Originally posted by: homestarmy
Those temps are NOTHING.

Exactly. I usually don't worry about it until they hit 60C and the Tbred chips are good up to a max temperature of 80-90C.
 

BlueWeasel

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
15,944
475
126
Originally posted by: motoxpress
So, a 2400+ at 70c? bad?

mx

Yeah, 70C is pushing it. While it may be below AMD's specifications, I'd never run that chip at 70C.
 

VIAN

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2003
6,575
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47C max is just fine, you should just start worrying when you get above 50C. And do something about it when you get to 55C.

I have this chip, with voltage increasing for OCing the chip would fail when it closed in on 60C @ 1.8V.
 

imported_Kiwi

Golden Member
Jul 17, 2004
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Originally posted by: VIAN
47C max is just fine, (...) do something about it when you get to 55C.

I have this chip, with voltage increasing for OCing the chip would fail when it closed in on 60C @ 1.8V.
I've had an old T-Bird 1.33 in a Gigabyte ZXE for over three years, always on the warm side, apparently -- never OC'd; when I upgraded the video, it started getting unstable from running 60-62 when the video card was working hard. With an improved cpu hsf situation, it has stayed in the low 50's at its max effort. Suddenly, over the past weekend, without making any changes, it was back to the high 50's and showing instabilities again. That system is my primary eMail and Inet surfing box, and it's been pretty much trouble-free (running 24-7 months at a time) most of its life.

I blew a lot of compressed air into the hsf's fins, in case there was dust I couldn't see in it. And gave the thing a gentle "wiggle" to be sure the clamp was secure (it is). Fan speeds were normal, the room temps are normal, the usual uses of the system are the same, but it was getting hot. Last night, it was at 58 C when I was ready to retire to my BR to read a book. I decided to shut it all the way down for a change.

One of the changes a year ago when I upgraded the cpu fan, was from ribbon cables to the round ones, for better ventilation in the case. I've seen some problems with those cables, when you are changing drives, and they stop working. I haven't made any drive changes in that system in months. I haven't swapped *BACK* to a new ribbon cable yet, since I think more was wrong at last night's shut down than I knew.

The POST can't find either of the Hdd's (both on the IDE-O controller), and generally speaking, all of the "Optimum" settings in the BIOS were reset to baseline settings. Even the RAM speed had been reset from 133 to 100. So I think part of the Via KT-133 "Southbridge" has been damaged/blown/worn out (isn't that where the IDE Controller resides?) Where would the extra heating have been coming from? Ideas, folks?


I'm going to miss this PC, if the MB is shot. It's been probably the least troublesome system I've owned since MS Windows displaced MS-DOS (I had a couple of good ones back in the 286/386 DOS 5.0 era, too).


:frown:
 

VIAN

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2003
6,575
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You should have posted this in a seperate thread.

I don't know what could have caused that extra heat, but others might.