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  1. #1
    Competent StuKeith's Avatar
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    ITs new RAM. I brought this ram as well to see if it helped, but no.

    Idle is 65oc under load is 70+ I cleaned the mobo cpu and hs/fan and applied new grease!

    Im going to get a new CPU soon. Unless I can try the cpu in one of yours H?

    that way can deffo make sure that its that!
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  2. #2
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    The Newcastle and especially the Clawhammer Athlon64's do run hot with the default cooler - about 45-50C idle and 55-60 full load. Those are perfectly acceptable temp ranges for an Athlon64 CPU and it'll be long obsolete before failing.

    Venice and later models run a lot cooler and rarely go above 50C as they're built on a smaller process - 90nm vs 130nm of older Athlon64's.

    Above 70C full load is hot, but remember that these are adjusted internal temps which read MUCH hotter than the external socket diode readings of old, so your motherboard may be either reporting unadjusted or inaccurate readings (a common issue with early Athlon64 bios versions). Touch the heatsink while it's been running full load for several minutes - if it really is 70C+ you won't be able to keep your finger on it for more than a brief second. If you can keep your finger there for several seconds, it's probably running cooler than reported.

    Finally, if it's 100% stable running a program like prime95 after you've cleaned out the cooler and checked the heatsink greese/contact, then I wouldn't worry about the temp. It will fail prime95 LONG before hitting a temp that will damage the CPU or reduce it's life by any meaningful value to a home user.
    Last edited by Bloodwych; 19th November 2007 at 18:48.
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  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bloodwych View Post
    The Newcastle and especially the Clawhammer Athlon64's do run hot with the default cooler - about 45-50C idle and 55-60 full load. Those are perfectly acceptable temp ranges for an Athlon64 CPU and it'll be long obsolete before failing.

    Venice and later models run a lot cooler and rarely go above 50C as they're built on a smaller process - 90nm vs 130nm of older Athlon64's.

    Above 70C full load is hot, but remember that these are adjusted internal temps which read MUCH hotter than the external socket diode readings of old, so your motherboard may be either reporting unadjusted or inaccurate readings (a common issue with early Athlon64 bios versions). Touch the heatsink while it's been running full load for several minutes - if it really is 70C+ you won't be able to keep your finger on it for more than a brief second. If you can keep your finger there for several seconds, it's probably running cooler than reported.

    Finally, if it's 100% stable running a program like prime95 after you've cleaned out the cooler and checked the heatsink greese/contact, then I wouldn't worry about the temp. It will fail prime95 LONG before hitting a temp that will damage the CPU or reduce it's life by any meaningful value to a home user.
    I'm sure all 3700+ chips use the San Diego core which runs much cooler than the older Newcastle.

    It probably would be a useful thing to soak test the system over night and see what happens. And also to run a stress and memory test to also check everything is OK. The easiest way to do this is download the Ultimate boot CD from http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/ as it contains CPU Burn-In, Mersenne Prime Test and StressCPU, as well as Memory tests such as Memtest86. If you run these you will be sure the hardware is all OK.

    If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!


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    You might be right Harrison - those mad ratings are so confusing at times. I seem to remember an early 2.4GHz Clawhammer with 1MB cache being rated at 3700+ on socket 759 and thought that was the only chip to be rated as such. What I didn't realize until now is socket 939 also had a later 3700+ release with a san diego core!

    Like Harrison said, run tests to gauge performance against others with the same CPU and look for errors.
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    Quote Originally Posted by submeg
    How do I get into the registry?I cant remember!
    Start -> Run: regedit

    Rule of thumb when messing with the registry is backing it up first (File -> export), just in case you really mess things up!

    And here's a useful step-by-step guide for removing startup programs as well.
    Last edited by Teho; 20th November 2007 at 09:34.

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    Or download Codestuff Starter (freeware) if you don't fancy messing about in the registry.

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    Space Invaders Champion, Flash Sprint Champion, Seconds Of Madness Champion, BMX Park Champion Submeg's Avatar
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    Cool cheers ppl

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    Competent StuKeith's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Harrison;15761
    It probably would be a useful thing to soak test the system over night and see what happens. And also to run a stress and memory test to also check everything is OK. The easiest way to do this is download the Ultimate boot CD from [url
    http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/[/url] as it contains CPU Burn-In, Mersenne Prime Test and StressCPU, as well as Memory tests such as Memtest86. If you run these you will be sure the hardware is all OK.
    I left it on overnight with prime runing and it was hung on 40% or so. tried to load some over progs and told me didnt have permission to run anything, or file could not be found!
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    As your CPU is getting hot anyway, this indicates that Prime pushed the FPU in the CPU very hard and overheated the CPU, causing the crash. Therefore your CPU is definitely overheating and causing the instability in your system. Maybe think about getting a better heatsink. Also what case cooling do you have? And have you measured the temperature of the inside of the case?

    If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!


  10. #10
    Competent StuKeith's Avatar
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    Its the std case of an HP. The case fan is std medium size 8cm or what ever it is. sometimes it sounds like a jet plane taking off!
    :thumbs: Amiga, Wii Amiga on wii! SORTED! :thumbs:
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