CPU Model: E6600
CPU Clockspeed: 3.ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.3v
Motherboard: Asus P5W DH
BIOS Version: 1101
Heatsink/Block: Freezer Pro 7
Fan: freezer pro on optimal (1000rpm)
Idle/Load: 48-50 / 60-60
Ambient: 42
Utility Reading Temps: Everest / Coretemp.
Printable View
CPU Model: E6600
CPU Clockspeed: 3.ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.3v
Motherboard: Asus P5W DH
BIOS Version: 1101
Heatsink/Block: Freezer Pro 7
Fan: freezer pro on optimal (1000rpm)
Idle/Load: 48-50 / 60-60
Ambient: 42
Utility Reading Temps: Everest / Coretemp.
What Operating System are these idle temps taken from? My sytem idles 12C , Hotter in Windows 2000 Pro SP4 than XP Pro SP2.Quote:
Originally Posted by o_neill_dude
Your idle temps are much like mine, can I ask you what Operating system you run? My Windows 2000 Pro SP4 runs about 12C warmer than XP Pro SP2.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimbo
I attribute that to lack of speedstep drivers in Windows 2000.
They are built into XP. In the past was the manufacturers responsibilty to supply the drivers with the motherboard.
CPU Model: E6600 Retail
CPU Clockspeed: 2.4GHz
CPU Voltage: 1.2v
Motherboard: Asus P5B Dlx
BIOS Version: 0614
Heatsink/Block: Intel Retail
Fan: Intel Retail
Idle/Load: 48c/60c
Ambient: 24.4c
Utility Reading Temps: Core Temp
Case: P180 1 tricool exhause, 1 panaflow 85cfm exhaust, 1 panaflow 85cfm intake, 1 tricool intake
OS: WinXPSP2
I'm waiting on a Big Typhoon to replace the stock cooler. So I'll repost when I get the BT, stock, and OCed temps.
Those lists of temps/fans/heatsinks is nice, but you guys should also list the computer case you have, and the number of fans blowing air into them :)
Also don't forget to post which Operating system you use.Quote:
Originally Posted by itznfb
One of the key differences in Windows 2000 and XP is that XP has speedstep drivers built in. A motherboard with a speedstep enabled E6600 can idle at a cool 1.6GHZ while a E6600 on the Badaxe has to grind away at 2.4GHZ all the time.
I know I'm harping, but no one is posting their OS info... :(
i edited my post.
CPU Model: X6800 Retail
CPU Clockspeed: 3.47Ghz OC'd
CPU Voltage: 1.385v in CPU-Z
Motherboard: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
BIOS Version: 1201
Heatsink/Block: ThermalRight SI-128
Fan: Panaflo L1 @ 1600 RPM
Idle/Load: 32c/57c for the two cores
Ambient: ~23c
Utility Reading Temps: Everest
Case: Stacker 830, 1 Exchaust fan, 2 HD cages each one has fan for each drive that i have. Two Side panel Fans(Panaflo M1's running at max RPM)
OS: Win-XP-SP2
The 2 drives i have are running at a cool 26c if anyone likes to monitor those temps.
CPU Model: E6600 OEM Stepping 6 Rev B2
CPU Clockspeed: 2.4GHz
CPU Voltage: 1.3V
Motherboard: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
BIOS Version: 0801
Heatsink/Block: Swiftech Storm
Fan: N/A
Idle/Load: 33°C,23°C / 41°C,31°C
Ambient: 22°C
Utility Reading Temps: Core Temp, Everest (same readings as SpeedFan)
Case: Lian-Li PC-75B with 2x80mm front and rear (stock) and 2x120mm fans pulling air through the rad into the case (mounted in the top).
OS: WinXPSP2
I haven't had the time to start a serious attempt at overclocking yet.
So your getting almost the same cooling with air that I get with water! How quite is it?Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter949
You mentioned you had trouble engaging one of the retaining points, didn't you? Make sure all four points are fully home or you will not achieve good contact between the CPU and heatsink/block and the result will be significantly higher temps.Quote:
Originally Posted by RDTS
I am guessing things still are not seated correctly. Your temps 'should' be lower than air, even the BT.
I am running Windows XP home edition with SP2. I have Speedstep disabled in the bios, because im overclocking, would I be able to use this?Quote:
Originally Posted by GWillakers
CPU Model: E6600
CPU Clockspeed: 3.ghz
CPU Voltage: default
Motherboard: MSI 975x PowerUp
BIOS Version: 7.1
Heatsink/Block: Big Typhoon
Fan: 1300rpm
Idle/Load: 40-42 / 48-50
Ambient: 28
Utility Reading Temps: Dual Core Center
Thanks for your assistance,Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimbo
I believe speedstep has to be disabled both in bios and the OS.
One way to interogate, is to right click my computer, bring up the properties page, general tab... you should see a label something like E6600 2.4 GHz, under that it would say 1.6GHz if speedstep is active.
{of course you wouldn't run heavy tasks while doing the above}
CPU Model: E6600 Retail
CPU Clockspeed: 2.4GHz (all settings stock)
Motherboard: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
BIOS Version: 0701
Heatsink/Block: Thermalright Si-128
Fan: Scythe 1200rpm
Idle/Load: 52c/66c
Ambient: 26c
Utility Reading Temps: Core Temp
Case: Coolermaster Stacker 830, stock fans (one in front for HDs, one in back)
OS: WinXPSP2
There is obviously something really wrong with my temps. What is interesting is Asus PC Probe II says the CPU is 33-34c idle, 48-50c load. That is a lot bigger gap in tempature than I see in a lot of these posts. The Si-128 is a real pain to get seated correctly, but I have the thing on there right now so tight it is bending my MB a pretty good amount. Unfortunately, I think my chip is not flat because when I was trying to get the Si-128 on, I was noticing the thermal paste was not touching the heatsink in the center, only on the sides. I don't really know what to do about that, I am not going to lap it or anything of that nature. I was hoping to overclock this thing to atleast 3ghz, but as of now it seems as though it is too hot even at stock speeds. I wonder if I should buy something easier to put on. The only thing I am worried about is getting a heatsink that will fit in my case with the fan tray on the side.
You MUST have good contact or your temps are going to sky rocket, particularly under load.Quote:
Originally Posted by perfektrtw
If things aren't flat and you don't want to make them flat, you need more thermal paste. Place a 'little' more than you used originally on the centre of the CPU and then carefully press down evenly using the block's retaining method, which should squeeze out the paste evenly and fill the void between.
Sounds like you're overtightening to compensate. This won't work. You won't force the mating surfaces flat by doing this. Try not to bend the motherboard (easily said, I know ;) )
CPU Model: E6600
CPU Clockspeed: 3.00ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.35v (BIOS), ~1.33v idle (CPU-Z), ~1.32v load (CPU-Z)
Motherboard: P5W-DH Deluxe
BIOS Version: 1301
Heatsink/Block: Stocker... what a piece...
Fan: Stocker
Idle/Load: 28/46*C
Ambient: 20*C (estimated)
Utility Reading Temps: SpeedFan 4.29
IHS: Unmodified, slightly concave when compared to a credit card
CPU Model: E6600
CPU Clockspeed: 2.4ghz
CPU Voltage: default
Motherboard: Intel D975XBX
BIOS Version: 1304
Heatsink/Block: Scythe Infinity
Fan: Scythe 120mm @ 1200rpm
Idle/Load: 35 / 45
Ambient: 28
Utility Reading Temps: Coretemp
OS: XP Home SP2
Case: Silverstone TJ-06
Case Fans: 1x Silverstone 120mm @1200rpm (Front), 1x Yate Loon 120mm @ 740rpm (Rear), 1x Silverstone 80mm (Front)
IHS & Heatsink/block NOT lapped
CPU Model: E6600 Retail Stepping 6
CPU Clockspeed: 3.42GHz / 380Mhz FSB
CPU Voltage: 1.500V (Bios)
Motherboard: Gigabyte 965P DS4
BIOS Version: F3
Heatsink/Block: Zalman CNPS9500 LED
Idle/Load: 54°C / 74°C
Ambient: 20-something °C
Utility Reading Temps: Core Temp
Case: Lian-Li 6070a with 120mm front and 250mm fan in the door sucking in air.
OS: WinXPSP2
IHS and heatsink is lapped. Still damn hot, but stable...
What are the max safe temps for E6600 and due to which temp readings (Core Temp or something else)?????
got the big typhoon installed.
initially dropped my temps quite a bit.
31c/42c on stock volts.
as soon as i bumped up the volts to 1.45 though temps went up to 45c/62c. so i think i may have a bad mount. i'll have to try again tonight.
Quote:
Originally Posted by itznfb
New wc sistem on my E6400 :D
http://img359.imageshack.us/img359/5...sbaixaszx6.jpg
regards
it sure does ! :)Quote:
Originally Posted by RDTS
I've just been looking through and comparing some of my historical Everest logs and notice that Core #1 is consistently 2c hotter than Core #2, pretty much running F@H constantly on both cores 24/7 for weeks.
Anyone else notice this?
I read somewhere that there aren't two physical cores on a C2D as such, however, could this imply that I have an eneven spread of Artic Silver 5 (thermal interface material)?
Quote:
Originally Posted by GAM
my cores are usualy 2c off in tat and core temp, the strange thing now is that tat is showing 4c difference between them :)
on the side note, ppl that are posting thir temps should post with what software for load
....and 'ambient' temps, otherwise the info is meaningless.Quote:
Originally Posted by Millyons
You can add me to the list of people with a 15-20 C difference between my ASUS CPU temp and TAT core temps.
I've tried reseating my Noctua NH-U12 with no difference and my E6600 seems as flat as it can be.
OC to 3.51 with 1.42 V:
ASUS 35 C and TAT 50 and 55 C at idle
ASUS 56 C and TAT 70 and 74 C at TAT full load
Like everyone else with this issue, the cooler is barely warm during TAT full load. The temps do drop back to idle temps almost immediately when it goes from load to idle.
Core Temp and Everest report closer to TAT.
Hopefully someone can shed some light on this quirk :confused:
E6600
P5B 0614
1.35 vcore bios
Arctic freezer
Ambient 21 deg
Idle: 32c deg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...mestockTAT.jpg
system in my sig @2.66Ghz (stock voltage), GPU in the loop, IDLE Temp - top right corner in RED FONT. Room temp: 25.5C
Folding on LOAD:
http://imagestore.ugbox.net/aview/lo...f8dda9ad64b77b
TAT on Load:
http://imagestore.ugbox.net/aview/Pi...955f0d0dd856da
CPU Model: E6400 retail (week 26)
CPU Clockspeed: 3.2Ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.36v
Motherboard: P5B Deluxe Wifi
BIOS Version: 0711
Heatsink/Block: stock
Fan: stock
Idle/Load: 40/68 C (attempted once)
Ambient: 73 (F)
Utility Reading Temps: Asus motherboard bundle
I was a bit shocked to see my temps soar so high under load. The move upwards was almost instant. I am running at stock cpu speeds again and will wait until I get some water on the cpu before I attempt anything further in terms of overclocking. My gut feeling is that the temps are not reading right for whatever reason, but that's just my intuition.
:)
FSB 400/1.36v with stock cooler? :nono:
-phil
:D
CPU Model: E6600 retail (week 24)
CPU Clockspeed: 4,014MHz
CPU Voltage: 1.585v (BIOS)
Motherboard: P5W64-WS PRO
BIOS Version: 0209
Heatsink/Block: NexXxos XP Lite (water)
Fan: 2x120mm Papst and 240mm radiator
Idle/Load: 44/65°C
Ambient: 22°C
Utility Reading Temps: Asus motherboard bundle
:toast:
CPU Model: E6400 L629A
CPU Clockspeed: 3.2Ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.256 (loaded) in windows (1.325 in bios)
Motherboard: Asus P5B Deluxe
BIOS Version: 0711
Heatsink/Block: TTST
Fan: Low speed 120mm
Idle/Load: 45/60-62 (w/speedstep)
Ambient: ~25
Utility Reading Temps: TAT
SPeed step drops it to 2400 and 1.05v. Still pretty hot tho. Was ~70° load at the same speeds with stock cooler.
Hey all by the way!
I finally put the cpu under my custom watercooling. Temps are now under control and show 29c Idle and 51c Orthos load. I have the cpu running at 3.6Ghz with 1.5v Orthos stable.Quote:
Originally Posted by SunTzu69
:banana:
I found my temps higher even higher than those with stock cooler :eek: . Much better now, tho still not great. Hopefully I'll sort my self out with some w/c'ing soon, or at least by the time I get a G80.Quote:
Originally Posted by SunTzu69
I'm liking the look of an apogee, mcr220, mcp350 and maybe mcw60 combo. Maybe that'll tame the beasts!
CPU Model: X6800
CPU Clockspeed: 3600
CPU Voltage: 1.55
Motherboard: P5B Deluxe WiFi
BIOS Version: 706
Heatsink/Block: (See sig)
CPU Idle/Load: 55C/65C
NB-System Idle/Load: 35C/38C
Ambient: 23C
Utility Reading Temps: TAT & Core Temp
I just do not believe my temps are this high!
As my ambient goes down so does my idle and max temps.
Temps plummet in a matters of secs when going from 100% to 0 so I think my WC system is adequate and my WB is seated correctly.
I think the MB just reads CPU temps about 10/15C too high.
The top of the Apogee WB is almost cool to the touch.
The top of the NB Sink is almost cool to the touch
Thoughts? Ideas?
Mel
It's the 1.55 vcore driving those temps up. Are you sure you need that much voltage for what is a modest o/c?
-phil
CPU Model: E6600 ( L628B)
CPU Clockspeed: 3500
CPU Voltage: 1.41( bios)
Motherboard: P5W DH
BIOS Version: 1101
Heatsink/Block: Thermalright ultra 120 / noiseblockers SX2 x 2
CPU Idle/Load: 39C/57C (core 0) 36C/55C (core 1)
Ambient: 22.5C
Utility Reading Temps: TAT & asus probe 2
http://img278.imageshack.us/img278/7996/changesgr0.jpg
http://img264.imageshack.us/img264/3623/changes2tv7.jpg
:)
CPU Model: E6600 L628A
CPU Clockspeed: OC 3600MHz (prime stable)
CPU Voltage: 1.42V
Motherboard: Abit AW9D-MAX
Bios : 1.2 Final
Heatsink/Block: Thermalright Ultra 120, Low rpm's fan
Idle: Core1 47ºC, Core2 45ºC (although heatsink is very cold)
Load: Core1 63ºC, Core2 62°C
Ambient: 23ºC
Utility Reading Temps: Core temp
CPU Model: E6600 Retail
CPU Clockspeed: 3000mhz on 1067 Strap (25% OC)
CPU Voltage: Default (intel wont tell you but I BELIEVE around 1.3 - CPUZ shows 1.213)
Motherboard: D975XBX Rev 305 w/ OC Plug Soldered and NB Fan Added
BIOS Version: 1378
Heatsink/Block: Nautilus 500 Water Cooled
Fan: 7000 rpm mini-fan superglued onto Northbridge.
Idle/Load: 52 / 40
Ambient: 24-26 celcius
Water shouldn't run this hot IMO. I'm guessing I have too much thermal grease under the water block. I'm using artic Silver.
svirf
I reckon this is because your vcore isn't really around 1.3 at all. 1.213 is a bug in cpuz. Is there a more reliable way of telling vcore?Quote:
Originally Posted by svirfnebli
Guys, I have a question....for days I've been doing runs to get my OC where I want it. I've ran 3Dmarks05, memtest86, orthos small FFT for an hour or so, and all seems well....
Temps are usually 50C /57C idle/load...........well, yesterday I let orhtos run a couple of times, 2 hours for small FFT, 2 hours for Blend test, and the temperatures were hovering around 65C :eek: :mad:
what gives?
no matter what I throw at it in the last week, it never went above 58C, but last nite during the orthos blend test, it even hit 67C.....is this normal, or something not right? After I stopped the test, the temps immediately dropped to 53C and eventually cooled back to 50C........that's almost a 20C difference!!!!!!!!:confused:
http://upshizzle.com/gallery/albums/...965_orthos.jpg
Quote:
Originally Posted by ssabripo
Orthos is VERY hard on the cpu, that is normal. Mine does the same thing.
wow...I never EVER expected near 20C changes...:eek: :confused:Quote:
Originally Posted by NO1B4ME
The more you overclock the faster and more the temperatures rise. This is what i am seeing on 4 seperate Chips.Quote:
Originally Posted by ssabripo
Now when you throw in watercooling, vapochill etc. the temperatures are controlled more. This is the reason why i ordered a ton of watercooling stuff to play with. I also have a Tuniq Tower120 arriving today. I will let you know on the outcome on how well it disipitates the heat.
Remember you are overclocking a cpu from its original 1.8ghz to 3.5gig which is almost double its recommended speed. You can try reseatting your heatsink to see if it helps.
You haven't seen heat until you've used the workload test on the Intel Thermal Analysis Tool.Quote:
Originally Posted by ssabripo
CPU: E6600 L628B126
Speed: 3300MHz
Voltage: 1.375v, according to BIOS
Mobo: MSI P965-Platinum
RAM: Corsair TwinX DDR2 PC6400C5@550Mhz, 5-5-5-15@2.2v
NB@stock volts
Cooling: Scythe Mine /w standard fan
Temp on both cores under Orthos: 65'c
Best Regards :toast:
I forgot to mention that, thanks :toast: . I use the TAT software for benching every overclock i peerform. If it is not stable running TAT then it will not be stable period.Quote:
Originally Posted by accord99
meh...it's stable enough for anything I'll possibly do in the next year or two....if it can handle Orthos small/large FFTs and blend tests for several hours fine, I'm ok :)
I doubt Oblivion/Quake4/Doom3/insertFavoriteGameHere or AutoCAD renderings or Video Editing will be anywhere close to stressing this system.
Heck, if several runs of 3Dmarks05 kept it at 57C, I'm good! :)
just very educating to me that something like orthos would cause such a HUGE difference in temperatures.
With TAT my temps got up to 70'c... Scaaary stuff... :p:
Best Regards :toast:
Same temperature weirdness here.
E6600 B2 @ 3000
G.Skill GBPK 2Gb
P5B Deluxe
1900XT
Arctic Cooler 7 Pro
Akasa Eclipse 62 case (big!) with 2 x 120 mm fans
Tagan PSU (580W I think)
Ambient : 28 C
Idle (333 x 6) : 46 C
Load
Orthos : Coretemp / TAT 57C, Asus 65C
TAT Stress test : 68 C <---- Toasty!
Dual Prime : 57C
No stability issues.
http://www.bakaark.myzen.co.uk/Stress%20test.GIF
System is stable, no extra CPU volts (NB tweaked a bit) and CPU will definitely go higher if I can get the temps under control - happy for now though!
Cheers
Chnks
:party:
CPU: E6600 L629A810
Speed: 3000MHz
Voltage: w/ DMM 1.236V
Mobo: Gigabyte DS4
RAM: D9GMH DDR668 3-3-3-9 @ 2.1V
NB@stock volts
Cooling: Water (NexXxos XP)
Desktop idle: 35ºC
Dual SP2004: 43ºC
My idle temps are fine, it's just the load is a LOT hotter for some reason.
Processor: E6600 @ 3.2Ghz | (Retail, Stepping 6 B2) | 1.37v
Motherboard: Asus P5B Deluxe (BIOS 0711) with custom NB HS
Memory: Corsair XMS2 PC6400 (4 4 4 12)
Cooling: Scythe Ninja Plus | Sharkoon Silent Eagle 120mm | AS5
Case: Lian Li PCV-1000 Plus
Idle (MB/CPU): 30/37
Load (MB/CPU): 34/68 :stick: max Dual Prime (CPU stress test)
Ambient: 22C
All temps with Asus Probe and CoreTemp (both give same temps)
37->68 is a massive jump... the biggest on this thread AFAIK.. what gives?
The HS heatpipe isn't even hot under load... don't know how it suppose to be at 68C?
i also have a 30c delta, with a SI-120 and a Panaflo M1, the IHS looks kinda OK though, it must be a bad contact between the core and the IHS
well, I reckon its best to have 30C deltas than smaller deltas at higher temps! :fact:
at least you are idling (which is the bulk of your time) at 40 and below.....many of us are idling high 40's to 50/51C, and load to high 50's to mid 60s.
I'm at 47C-55/56C idle-load :confused:
Quote:
Originally Posted by ssabripo
man there is no way a delta of 30c is better than anything........that is rise above the idle temp when under load........big delta = high temps
for me with my idle of 45ish that is 75 under load (core temp)
no no...I didn't say is a good thing:nono:Quote:
Originally Posted by Millyons
I said, I would rather have this:
34-63 idle/load
than this:
50-61 idle/load
:banana:
touch fingers = burnQuote:
Originally Posted by Omarko
>60-65C for sure (hot coffee temperature)
When you are using the probe on the heatsink it will show a little less than the actual thermal probe on the chip. I think the problem is more that the temperature for the CeleronD is UNDERstated.
wow didn't realize this took off. I added a link to TAT up there. Thanks for all the posts!
I never got above 64C running Orthos dual prime for 44 hours.
CPU Model: E6600 Stepping 6
CPU Clockspeed: 3.3 Ghz
CPU Voltage: 1.213 (CPU-Z)
Motherboard: D975XBX rev. 306
BIOS Version: 1351
Heatsink/Block: CM AquaGate Mini
Fan: 120ml Coollermaster built onto CM AquaGate Mini
Idle/Load: 39/45
Ambient: 37
Utility Reading Temps: Core Temp - Intel Desktop Utilities - Intel Thermal Analysys