![]() HWinfo is a good way to get that data and in my experience tends to be more accurate than some of the other utilities available. Monitoring temperatures, core speeds, voltages, clock ratios and other reported sensor data can often help to pick out an issue right off the bat. Run HWinfo and look at system voltages and other sensor readings. ![]() Always select the "Sensors only" option when running HWinfo. HWinfo is great for pretty much EVERYTHING, including CPU thermals, core loads, core temps, package temps, GPU sensors, HDD and SSD sensors, motherboard chipset and VRM sensor, all of it. They are also almost religiously kept up to date.ĬoreTemp is great for just CPU thermals including core temps or distance to TJmax on AMD platforms. I've found HWinfo or CoreTemp to be the MOST accurate with the broadest range of chipsets and sensors. Some are actually grossly inaccurate, especially with certain chipsets or specific sensors that for whatever reason they tend to not like or work well with. ![]() HWmonitor, Open hardware monitor, Realtemp, Speccy, Speedfan, Windows utilities, CPU-Z and most of the bundled motherboard utilities are often not the best choice as they are not always accurate. Verify using one or both of these programs. There may be something wrong with the motherboard or thermal sensors, or you may have inadvertently turned off thermal monitoring in the bios somehow.
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