F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Unusual temperature measurements during Prime95 usage

Unusual temperature measurements during Prime95 usage

Unusual temperature measurements during Prime95 usage

S
SirKumsishon
Senior Member
257
01-03-2019, 01:42 AM
#1
I got a EKWB Predator 240 liquid cooling unit for Christmas and thought about overclocking it.
I managed to hit 4.7ghz @1.265V on the Vcore and a 4.4ghz OC on the CPU cache.
The tool I use for checking temperatures and stability is Intel Extreme Tuning Utility.
Once I got a stable setting, I decided to try another program, which was Prime95.
At first, everything worked well for about 5-10 minutes with temperatures around the mid 60s. But later, my temps jumped into the 70s, 80s, and then 90s in seconds, so I turned off the PSU to prevent damage.
I ran the test again and the same issue happened during that period (took 7-9 minutes).
Do you think there’s something wrong with this kind of behavior?
S
SirKumsishon
01-03-2019, 01:42 AM #1

I got a EKWB Predator 240 liquid cooling unit for Christmas and thought about overclocking it.
I managed to hit 4.7ghz @1.265V on the Vcore and a 4.4ghz OC on the CPU cache.
The tool I use for checking temperatures and stability is Intel Extreme Tuning Utility.
Once I got a stable setting, I decided to try another program, which was Prime95.
At first, everything worked well for about 5-10 minutes with temperatures around the mid 60s. But later, my temps jumped into the 70s, 80s, and then 90s in seconds, so I turned off the PSU to prevent damage.
I ran the test again and the same issue happened during that period (took 7-9 minutes).
Do you think there’s something wrong with this kind of behavior?

K
KeeversoonBr
Junior Member
44
01-18-2019, 10:09 AM
#2
The way you check for primes in your running code matters. Just avoid using it anymore—it’s no longer useful. I believe versions prior to 26.6 are acceptable, while anything after the Intel processors is better.
K
KeeversoonBr
01-18-2019, 10:09 AM #2

The way you check for primes in your running code matters. Just avoid using it anymore—it’s no longer useful. I believe versions prior to 26.6 are acceptable, while anything after the Intel processors is better.

J
jesse_64
Member
108
02-07-2019, 12:59 PM
#3
The way you check for primes in your running code matters. Just avoid using it anymore—it’s no longer useful. I believe versions prior to 26.6 are acceptable, and any update beyond that, especially with Intel processors, should be okay.
J
jesse_64
02-07-2019, 12:59 PM #3

The way you check for primes in your running code matters. Just avoid using it anymore—it’s no longer useful. I believe versions prior to 26.6 are acceptable, and any update beyond that, especially with Intel processors, should be okay.