F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Issues with Temperature Monitoring

Issues with Temperature Monitoring

Issues with Temperature Monitoring

Z
Zaikku
Junior Member
7
01-15-2017, 03:24 AM
#1
I have adjusted my Ryzen 1700 stable to [email protected] and am satisfied with this setting.
During stress testing on Aida64, I’m having trouble obtaining reliable temperature readings.
My Corsair H60 liquid cooling setup shows two different values: under the motherboard it lists "CPUTIN" at 82C, while under the CPU it shows "Package" at 50C (this seems inconsistent).
On Aida64, the CPU temperature reads 49C.
In AMD Ryzen Master it displays a single core reading of 49C.
On Core Temp 1.8.1 it only provides one core reading between 48-51C.
Anyone have a clue about this issue? Accurate temperatures are important for monitoring overheating risks.
Thanks
Ry
Z
Zaikku
01-15-2017, 03:24 AM #1

I have adjusted my Ryzen 1700 stable to [email protected] and am satisfied with this setting.
During stress testing on Aida64, I’m having trouble obtaining reliable temperature readings.
My Corsair H60 liquid cooling setup shows two different values: under the motherboard it lists "CPUTIN" at 82C, while under the CPU it shows "Package" at 50C (this seems inconsistent).
On Aida64, the CPU temperature reads 49C.
In AMD Ryzen Master it displays a single core reading of 49C.
On Core Temp 1.8.1 it only provides one core reading between 48-51C.
Anyone have a clue about this issue? Accurate temperatures are important for monitoring overheating risks.
Thanks
Ry

B
BreakTheGame
Junior Member
24
01-15-2017, 04:22 AM
#2
Cputin is the socket. The remaining four components are the CPU. Core temperature is roughly in line. An average of 49°C is correct. This should be as precise as possible. It feels quite warm to me. I believe a better option than the H60 would be necessary for overclocking. Also, temperatures will rise when you apply stress. Regarding your update.
B
BreakTheGame
01-15-2017, 04:22 AM #2

Cputin is the socket. The remaining four components are the CPU. Core temperature is roughly in line. An average of 49°C is correct. This should be as precise as possible. It feels quite warm to me. I believe a better option than the H60 would be necessary for overclocking. Also, temperatures will rise when you apply stress. Regarding your update.

M
master_scope
Posting Freak
794
01-15-2017, 05:57 AM
#3
Cputin is the socket. The remaining four components are the CPU. Core temperature is roughly in line. An average of 49°C is correct. This should be as precise as possible. It feels quite warm to me. I believe a better option than the H60 would be necessary for overclocking. Also, temperatures will rise when you apply stress. Regarding your update.
M
master_scope
01-15-2017, 05:57 AM #3

Cputin is the socket. The remaining four components are the CPU. Core temperature is roughly in line. An average of 49°C is correct. This should be as precise as possible. It feels quite warm to me. I believe a better option than the H60 would be necessary for overclocking. Also, temperatures will rise when you apply stress. Regarding your update.