Program designed to capture temperature, wattage, and voltage continuously
Program designed to capture temperature, wattage, and voltage continuously
Hi!
I'm searching for a program that can store various variables in a text file, graph, or similar format. I've tried the CPUID Hardware Monitor, but it requires stopping recording first.
I also have a problem where my PC restarts during certain actions and I need to check the temperatures just before it shuts down.
Any assistance would be greatly appreciated!
I suspect you're probably looking at this the wrong way.
There's 'live' software that can monitor your temps/voltage etc in real-time, which would give you a solid idea whether you're looking at temperature, voltage or similar.
I.e., if you're running X component at 60'C, it's not suddenly going to spike to unsafe temps and cause a shutdown. If you're hovering right at that 'safe' line already, you already have a pretty good idea.
I'd suggest starting with your full system specs.
Intel Extreme Tuning Utility provides real-time graphs during monitoring-only use. It has been available for several years. I recommend sharing details about your system so others can understand it better.
Components:
ASUS GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER DUAL EVO OC V2
AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
ASUS ROG Strix B450-F GAMING, Socket-AM4
HyperX Fury RGB DDR4 2666MHz 16GB
Corsair TX850M, 850W PSU
Kingston A2000 1TB NVMe M.2 SSD
Running the Superposition test for my GPU never caused a crash; it performed up to 1080p extreme settings.
CPU testing details:
https://cpux.net/cpu-benchmark-online/h3r5t
average temperature around 60°C during the session.
When launching games like Final Fantasy XIV or The Witcher 3, I can navigate through the main menu and press play/continue without issues. When heavier graphics are activated, the application crashes before any visuals appear. For The Witcher 3, it loads fully until you reach the gameplay section.
Are you genuinely experiencing a crash or shutdown?
This issue might stem from the driver and could involve the display shutting down. The power supply unit or voltage regulator temperatures may be the cause. If the problem were with the CPU or GPU, they would have built-in protections to prevent damage.
It’s a quick restart, like switching the PC on and off in a flash. No BSOD or errors, nothing appears in Event Viewer.
@Dhex100
You have posted to a 5 year + old (necro) thread.
Please start a new thread of your own with full specs and more details with respect to what is happening on your system.
Closing this thread to further posts.