ASRock Fatal1ty B450 GAMING-ITX MotherBoard Temps |
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LilNardo
Newbie Joined: 06 Jul 2020 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: 06 Jul 2020 at 5:24am |
https://imgur.com/KkEH3sh
Don't know why the image isn't showing but here is the link. |
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LilNardo
Newbie Joined: 06 Jul 2020 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Here you can see the pale blue line (TMPIN5) goes from 65C @ idle to 122C rapidly when OCCT is running. Then instantaneously to 57C and stays there until I stop the stress test. The temperature then goes in the 40s and won't ever go above 57C if I start a test again. I have to close all HWmonitor and OCCT and reopen them to be able to see the real temperate (65C). |
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LilNardo
Newbie Joined: 06 Jul 2020 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Following further testing, if I push the CPU for heat (small data set, OCCT), I can reach 122C and it is still increasing. After 122C I think it reaches the max of the probe because the temp. drops down to 57C instantaneously.
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LilNardo
Newbie Joined: 06 Jul 2020 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Hey I haven't been able to find anywhere what is TMPIN5 for. My TMPIN6 is also constantly between 113-116C which from what I understand now is not a problem. But when I stress test the CPU TMPIN5 can reach 115C or more. I'd like to know if this is the VRM and if it is normal or not.
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 22943 |
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HWmonitor is one of the better 3rd party apps yes. Every board manufacturer uses it's own sensor layout and design so it is very common for 3rd party apps to misread/misidentify sensors when new products launch. It takes a while for the 3rd party developer to update the software, typically by reverse engineering the manufacturers own temp monitoring app or the info directly from the BIOS.
3rd party apps tend to be more comprehensive and can tell you a lot more about what your system is doing but the downside is that they can really freak you out on occasion when your board isn't properly supported and you see unnaturally high readings. I always start out with the manufacturer app to make sure everything is good there, once I know all is well I then get rid of the typically very basic manufacturer app and install HWmonitor or the like. |
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Ray62
Groupie Joined: 01 Jul 2018 Location: Germany, Berlin Status: Offline Points: 706 |
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Current HWMonitor is Version 1.40 from March 2019
Try https://www.hwinfo.com/ HWInfo has a lot of more features, is updated very often and a more common used tool |
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Asrock Fatal1ty X370 Professional Gaming Offline
Under test: MSI X570_MEG_ACE | AMD Ryzen 9 3900X | Scythe Mugen5 | 2x16GB F4-3200C14D-32GTZ@3466 | ASUS GeForce GTX 1080 Ti FE |
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OwlEyes
Newbie Joined: 18 Jun 2019 Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Oh damn I didn't notice lol but that's cause it's wrong on there. The true gauge is 1.35v, for some reason HWMonitor is reader 1.8
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 22943 |
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You can thank spammers for that, they figured out that we were deleting posts that contained links not pertinent to tech so they made seemingly relevant posts and then came back the next day and edited in their spam links (buy your nike shoes here for example). It made it next to impossible to notice once they had scrolled off the recent post list. So now, no more hot linking and no more edit function. This is by design to make my life easier and keep the community safe from potentially harmful links. Back in the day all you had to worry about were bots that spammed a half dozen or so posts with BS in them, now we have actual human spammers that get paid to abuse forums. End result, not as easy to thwart.... As for the sensors, if it isn't detected as high with ASRock's own utility then it is an error in the monitoring app. Install the ASRock tuning utility for your board and have a look at what that tells you, so long as no temps are overly high there, you are fine. |
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Onox
Newbie Joined: 27 Nov 2017 Status: Offline Points: 43 |
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Well, the sensor probably is connected to something here since the temperature varies. But sometimes, you will see temperatures that never vary on some mainboards. For example, TMPIN3 always stays at 40 °C on my X370 Taichi. (Why can't we edit posts here? This forum could really use some improvements, like Unicode support too )
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Onox
Newbie Joined: 27 Nov 2017 Status: Offline Points: 43 |
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As far as I know, very high temperatures like this can indicate a bad or not connected sensor, or sometimes the temperature is just not read correctly by HW Monitor. But you didn't give much information. What overclock do you have? Also, do you really have 1.8 V on the DRAM!? This is dangerously high!
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