First post here! I’ve been following the YouTube channel for quite some time and am excited to finally post in this forum!
I’m quite new to windows /pcs. Previously most of my time has been on mac. I’ve recently built the below system for 3D rendering work and today started exploring with HWiNFO64 v7.30-4870.
I noticed a few sensors on the motherboard look high, even when at idle and wondered if it may be a build issue I could fix?
Motherboard = 32c
CPU = 39c
Temp2 = 79c (highest = 88c)
Temp3 = 93c (highest = 103c)
Temp4 = 92c (highest = 103c)
Temp5 = 97c (Highest = 105c)
CPU (Weighted Value) = 32c
CPU (PEIC Calibrated) = 11c
Temp9 = 50c
Do I have anything to gain by improving these?
Should I be worried?
Does anyone know where these sensors are?
Build specs:
Asus Pro WS WRX80E-SAGE SE WIFI
5975WX
256GB RAM
ASUS TUF-RTX3090-024G
EVGA 2000w
We’re using a Noctua Nh-U14s Tr4with dual fans and 6 case fans.
Good morning, we have 6 of these builds in currently, I will try and take a reading off them once complete. I would assume these may be acceptable temperatures since chipset and board temperatures can be considerably higher than other components. This motherboard comes with two onboard mini fans, one for the chipset and one for the IO panel area. One thing I did note when unpacking these motherboards is that the fan grills are covered by a plastic film which should be removed, I assume you have removed this?
Yeah, I’m the one who posted about this a few weeks ago and my specs are identical to yours.
It’s hard to say if this is “normal” or a bug with HW Info as there are other areas that are not properly reported (ie. RAM sticks)
I noticed that temps have gone down ever so slightly once I closed the side panel of my Fractal Design 7XL, so my thinking is that they are indeed temperatures.
For the BMC setup, if you are looking at board flat on the bench you want to plug in the port closest to you, easier on DHCP enabled network, login is admin/admin. You can get IP from BIOS, server management section, under BMC network configuration. Can’t see any temps in the 100’s of degrees range but then I can’t see a sensor labelled as chipset in there either.
You know it’s interesting reading that explanation. It sounds like someone in the board design didn’t put a pull-down resistor on the sensor header so that when they’re not connected it’s not going to show high instead of low.
Sorry for the delay, these are temperature readings that I got from the board. One thing I found odd, those temps that report at 100 degrees plus, all increased a couple of degrees when the system was under load.
@mark.linton the board sensors seem really limited on the BMC, as you will see in my screen shots I only had CPU, LAN, the rest were the GPU, and memory DIMMs.