F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Prime 95

Prime 95

Prime 95

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Soldier_Games
Member
60
04-08-2016, 05:05 AM
#1
I've been using this for roughly 20 to 30 minutes and reached a temperature of 43°C. Is that typical, or could I be misreading the data?
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Soldier_Games
04-08-2016, 05:05 AM #1

I've been using this for roughly 20 to 30 minutes and reached a temperature of 43°C. Is that typical, or could I be misreading the data?

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CookieStars
Member
220
04-08-2016, 05:10 PM
#2
It varies based on your processor model and the software you employ to monitor temps. Certain applications may struggle to interpret temperature sensor data from specific CPU designs. For Intel chips, consider Intel Extreme Tuning Utility or HWiNFO. With AMD Ryzen, Ryzen Master works well. If you have an AMD CPU before Ryzen, AMD Overdrive is recommended due to how FX and A Series APUs display temps. You can find more details in a Reddit discussion if you'd like.
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CookieStars
04-08-2016, 05:10 PM #2

It varies based on your processor model and the software you employ to monitor temps. Certain applications may struggle to interpret temperature sensor data from specific CPU designs. For Intel chips, consider Intel Extreme Tuning Utility or HWiNFO. With AMD Ryzen, Ryzen Master works well. If you have an AMD CPU before Ryzen, AMD Overdrive is recommended due to how FX and A Series APUs display temps. You can find more details in a Reddit discussion if you'd like.

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stofzuiger79
Junior Member
26
04-08-2016, 08:24 PM
#3
The older Ryzen models struggle with Prime95 tasks similar to Intel or Zen 2 chips, especially under AIO conditions. Lower temperatures could still be feasible. Cinebench R15 and Realbench offer more engaging workloads for this generation.
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stofzuiger79
04-08-2016, 08:24 PM #3

The older Ryzen models struggle with Prime95 tasks similar to Intel or Zen 2 chips, especially under AIO conditions. Lower temperatures could still be feasible. Cinebench R15 and Realbench offer more engaging workloads for this generation.