F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Yes, you can use Msi Afterburner to monitor your component temperatures.

Yes, you can use Msi Afterburner to monitor your component temperatures.

Yes, you can use Msi Afterburner to monitor your component temperatures.

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Pikachue
Junior Member
2
03-11-2016, 02:12 PM
#1
Yes, you can use MSI Afterburner to monitor your CPU temperatures. It works well with Ryzen 3 CPUs that have built-in graphics.
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Pikachue
03-11-2016, 02:12 PM #1

Yes, you can use MSI Afterburner to monitor your CPU temperatures. It works well with Ryzen 3 CPUs that have built-in graphics.

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Backstaber970
Senior Member
435
03-11-2016, 08:17 PM
#2
MSI Afterburner can retrieve information from programs like AIDA64 and HWINFO. If they function correctly and you configure it right, it should work fine.
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Backstaber970
03-11-2016, 08:17 PM #2

MSI Afterburner can retrieve information from programs like AIDA64 and HWINFO. If they function correctly and you configure it right, it should work fine.

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KingJaydxn
Member
240
03-13-2016, 04:50 AM
#3
But I’m unsure about the MSI afterburner—what exactly is it doing? I’m worried it could affect my system instead of just monitoring temperatures.
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KingJaydxn
03-13-2016, 04:50 AM #3

But I’m unsure about the MSI afterburner—what exactly is it doing? I’m worried it could affect my system instead of just monitoring temperatures.

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Batai22
Member
184
03-13-2016, 05:02 AM
#4
For quick temperature checks, run HWinfo64 alongside MSIAfterburner or RivaTuner—it lets you show readings in a live overlay.
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Batai22
03-13-2016, 05:02 AM #4

For quick temperature checks, run HWinfo64 alongside MSIAfterburner or RivaTuner—it lets you show readings in a live overlay.

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NEMO_066
Junior Member
48
03-13-2016, 05:18 AM
#5
They mentioned HWinfo64 is problematic and not safe. It’s unclear whether downloading it would be a good idea.
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NEMO_066
03-13-2016, 05:18 AM #5

They mentioned HWinfo64 is problematic and not safe. It’s unclear whether downloading it would be a good idea.

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69
03-13-2016, 06:15 AM
#6
Who said that?
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Pinkpineapples
03-13-2016, 06:15 AM #6

Who said that?

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iheartpaws
Junior Member
6
03-13-2016, 01:59 PM
#7
MSI afterburners is mainly used to boost GPU performance through overclocking. However, you don’t need to run it for that purpose—it offers a great monitoring feature that displays various system statistics over time in clear graphs. I keep it running nonstop for my computer. That person doesn’t understand what they’re saying. HWinfo64 is one of the top tools for tracking almost everything on your PC.
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iheartpaws
03-13-2016, 01:59 PM #7

MSI afterburners is mainly used to boost GPU performance through overclocking. However, you don’t need to run it for that purpose—it offers a great monitoring feature that displays various system statistics over time in clear graphs. I keep it running nonstop for my computer. That person doesn’t understand what they’re saying. HWinfo64 is one of the top tools for tracking almost everything on your PC.

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SanayZockt
Junior Member
5
03-13-2016, 06:43 PM
#8
This statement suggests the person being criticized lacks sufficient knowledge.
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SanayZockt
03-13-2016, 06:43 PM #8

This statement suggests the person being criticized lacks sufficient knowledge.

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ElNacho
Junior Member
39
03-13-2016, 08:24 PM
#9
MSI afterburner is mainly used to manage your graphics card and view its data. It might also help track CPU temperatures because the integrated graphics are built into the CPU. This tool is commonly used to monitor and potentially overclock GPUs. Although it can sometimes cause crashes, permanent harm is unlikely, particularly with an integrated GPU. For CPU monitoring on an AMD system, you can use AMD-specific software that offers similar features. If you prefer alternatives, try GPU-z (sensors tabs), AIDA64 or HWinfo to explore other options. Good luck!
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ElNacho
03-13-2016, 08:24 PM #9

MSI afterburner is mainly used to manage your graphics card and view its data. It might also help track CPU temperatures because the integrated graphics are built into the CPU. This tool is commonly used to monitor and potentially overclock GPUs. Although it can sometimes cause crashes, permanent harm is unlikely, particularly with an integrated GPU. For CPU monitoring on an AMD system, you can use AMD-specific software that offers similar features. If you prefer alternatives, try GPU-z (sensors tabs), AIDA64 or HWinfo to explore other options. Good luck!

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king22704
Member
53
03-28-2016, 01:09 AM
#10
It provides detailed metrics like CPU temperature, speed, clock rate, voltage, and power usage, even without an integrated GPU.
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king22704
03-28-2016, 01:09 AM #10

It provides detailed metrics like CPU temperature, speed, clock rate, voltage, and power usage, even without an integrated GPU.