Here is a program that watches your temperature, wattage, and voltage all at once without stopping or getting tired.
Here is a program that watches your temperature, wattage, and voltage all at once without stopping or getting tired.
Hi! I need a program that lets me store different variables in a text file, graph, or something similar. I tried using the CPUID Hardware Monitor, but it stops saving when I click "Stop recording." My computer restarts for some tasks, and I want to know what temperatures are right before the power goes out. Any help would be great!
If your computer crashes, the information might not get saved immediately. It could just sit there in the temporary memory called RAM. You would need to watch it from another place using the link on Google Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/detai....rsm&hl=ro
I guess you might be looking at this backwards. There are online tools that can check your temperature or voltage right now. This helps tell you what kind of reading you're seeing. For example, if your part is already at 60 degrees C and safe, it won't suddenly jump to a dangerous level just because you're watching it closely. If you're already close to the limit on your own device, you'd better know that already. I think checking all your system details first would be best.
Here are my parts: ASUS GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER DUAL EVO OC V2, AMD Ryzen 7 3700X, ASUS ROG Strix B450-F GAMING board, Socket-AM4 HyperX Fury RGB DDR4 2666MHz with 16GB RAM from Corsair, and an 850W PSU from Kingston. When I run the Superposition test on my GPU, it never crashes. I tested this up to 1080p with extreme settings. The CPU stayed around 60 degrees Celsius while running these tests.
When I start a game, like Final Fantasy XIV or The Witcher 3, I can get through the main menu and press play or continue. But when it gets heavy graphics, my computer crashes before I even see anything on screen. For The Witcher 3, it loads everything up to where you would normally enter the game.
Are you really crashing or shutting down? Crashing (like your screen going black) might mean a driver problem or power issues like a bad power supply. Heat could come from the PSU or VRM temps, too. If it was the CPU or GPU, those parts usually have built-in safety features to slow things down instead of risking damage.
This feels like a quick restart without any trouble. I just turned my computer off and back on super fast—so fast it was almost instant. There are no blue screen errors or mistakes in the logs, and no strange messages showing up after I rebooted.
Hey @Dhex100, you're talking about an old thread that has been dead for 5 years. Since I don't know all the facts here, start a brand new one so everyone can see what's going on with your system and give it full details. Just please stop posting in this old one now.