Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How hot does your Coppermines become?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • How hot does your Coppermines become?

    I have accuired a PII 800EB and I think the HS we recived with it is rather small.

    It's a Coolermaster "DP5-5F11" and according to the Cpu onboard sensor it goes somewhere abowe 65 degres Celsius.

    Intel says that they are good up to 80C but i wonder.

    I ahve checked Coolermasters site and the HS is rated up to 866MHz.

    But it would be great to know how hot others Coppermines becomes.

    Thanks in advance.
    If there's artificial intelligence, there's bound to be some artificial stupidity.

    Jeremy Clarkson "806 brake horsepower..and that on that limp wrist faerie liquid the Americans call petrol, if you run it on the more explosive jungle juice we have in Europe you'd be getting 850 brake horsepower..."

  • #2
    I think you're on the high side. How high depends on how you got that temperature.

    If your motherboard supports the Coppermine's built-in temperature monitoring feature (VIA Apollo Pro 133A boards do), and if that temperature was recorded when the CPU is under load, your on the high side. If you're using a BX board, which doesn't support the feature, you're probably way too high.

    Under load, using an Asus P3V4X (which gets the chip temperature directly from the chip), the temperatures on my overclocked PIII 700 tend to fluctuate from 45 to 58C.

    Ambient room temperature is around 70F/21C. I'm using a Globalwin heatsink and a silver-based grease.

    Paul
    paulcs@flashcom.net

    Comment


    • #3
      well, mine runs at 58f, but it has beast on it
      jim

      ------------------
      P3-700e @ 1052! Check it here!
      Abit BE6-2
      TwinMos 128mb pc-133
      Matrox Fusion Plus F800 AGP with 64mb fcram
      Maxtor 15.3gb 7,200rpm
      SB Live!
      Winblows 98se & DX7
      and 384k DSL!
      System 1:
      AMD 1.4 AYJHA-Y factory unlocked @ 1656 with Thermalright SK6 and 7k Delta fan
      Epox 8K7A
      2x256mb Micron pc-2100 DDR
      an AGP port all warmed up and ready to be stuffed full of Parhelia II+
      SBLIVE 5.1
      Maxtor 40g 7,200 @ ATA-100
      IBM 40GB 7,200 @ ATA-100
      Pinnacle DV Plus firewire
      3Com Hardware Modem
      Teac 20/10/40 burner
      Antec 350w power supply in a Colorcase 303usb Stainless

      New system: Under development

      Comment


      • #4
        PII 800EB? You mean PIII?
        My CPUs get to around 41-45C.
        Back when I used 500 MHz they were a good 10C warmer.

        My Atlas IV HD is at 26C right now.
        I can't want to finally get a new aluminium rack with SCA connectors so I can put in the Atlas 10k II. I don't dare using it without extra cooling.

        <style type="text/css">.sgn {font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11; color: black;} .sgnlink {text-decoration:none; color: #242472;}.sgnbold {font-weight:bold;}.sgnp3 {font-family: Arial;}</style><hr><div class="sgn">
        Supermicro <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.supermicro.com/PRODUCT/Chassis/sc750.htm">SC750A (CSE-017)</a> chassis, <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.supermicro.com/PRODUCT/MotherBoards/840/840.htm#Table 2">PIIIDM3</a> motherboard
        Intel <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.intel.com/pentiumiii/">Pentium <span class="sgnp3">III</span> 667MHz</a> x2
        Matrox <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.matrox.com/mga/products/mill_g400/home.htm">Millennium <span class="sgnbold">G400 MAX</span></a> -&gt; iiyama <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.iiyama.com/indexy/product2/9017e.htm">VisionMaster Pro 17 MT-9017T</a>
        Creative <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.soundblaster.com/products/sbliveplatinum/features.asp">Sound Blaster Live! Platinum</a> -&gt; Cambridge SoundWorks <a class="sgnlink" href="http://americas.creative.com/speakers/desktop-theater-2500/">DTT2500 Digital</a>
        Microsoft <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.microsoft.com/mouse/explorer.htm">IntelliMouse Explorer</a> (on USB)
        Quantum <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.quantum.com/products/hdd/atlas_IV/atlas_IV_overview.htm">Atlas <span class="sgnp3">IV</span> 9 WLS</a>, <a href="http://www.quantum.com/products/hdd/fireball_lct/fireball_lct_overview.htm" class="sgnlink">Fireball lct08 26, 17</a>, WD Caviar <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.wdc.com/products/non-current/drives/ac420400.html">AC420400D</a>
        Pioneer <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.pioneerusa.com/dvd_single.html#DVD103/113">DVD-303S</a>
        ZyXEL <a class="sgnlink" href="http://www.zyxel.com/html/product/ta/lcds.html">omni.net LCD Plus</a> (on COM1)
        TV Tuner card with Conexant Bt848</div></font>

        Comment


        • #5
          My P3-750@825 is usually around 40-43C.

          ------------------
          Intel P3-750@825 (7.5x110 FSB), Abit BE6-II, Micron PC133 256MB RAM (128MBx2), Quantum Fireball KA Plus 18.2GB, Promise Ultra66, Kenwood 72X TrueX, Plextor Plexwriter 8/4/32, 3Com Courier Analog V.Everything, Linksys LNE100TX NIC (1 Mbps SDSL!)Diamond MX300, Matrox G400MAX (PD6), DirectX 7.0a, Cambridge Soundworks Microworks system, Sony 19" 400PS, Logitech Cordless Mouseman Wheel, Epson Perfection 1200U PHOTO Scanner, Epson Stylus Color 850 inkjet, Addtronics 7890A w/ 350W Turbo-Cool PS

          Comment


          • #6
            My P3-700 is 30-35C while under load, high 20s when idle.

            ------------------
            P3-700E, Abit BF6, G400 MAX, 8.6 gig Seagate, 8.6 gig WD, SBLive 1024, 256Mb PC100... Mouse, Keyb, Stuff

            Comment


            • #7
              There you go, Technoid. Five response. Five radically different results. Our methologies are different, and Jim has a nuclear powered heatsink that keeps his CPU below room temperature.

              I'd say, given the variety of results, that your somewhat high or way too high, depending on your methodology.

              What I've found is (and I'm not sure if that's what's happening here. These are just my personal observations) get a reading directly from the CPU's built in sensor, and temperatures tend to be in the 50's. Use a thermistor and stick it inbetween the heatsink and the PCB and temperatures and temperatures tend to be in the 40's. Use a BX board's CPU temperature monitoring feature, without a thermistor, and temperatures tend to top out in the 30's.

              Use exotic cooling, like a Peltier, and your CPU temperature may drop below room temperature.

              It's all relative.

              Here's Intel's page on the subject:
              http://support.intel.com/support/pro...ii/thermal.htm

              Paul
              paulcs@flashcom.net

              Comment


              • #8
                ... and don't forget that these reportings didn't include the ambient temperatures which can greatly affect chip temperature readings.
                <TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>

                Comment


                • #9
                  Ambient room temp ~22C, mobo temp 26C (pretty much constant), CPU at 24 idle, maxes at ~42 under load (depending on whether I burnt supper or not).

                  700e at 933, 1.8v, Alpha PAL35.

                  The Coolermasters don't have bad fans (small, but high rpm), but the heatsink doesn't have near enough mass to cut it as a quality cooler. It cracks me up that most people's oc'd rigs run cooler than stock ones
                  Games Box
                  --------------
                  Windows 2000Pro, ASUS A7Pro, Duron 750@950, 192MB Micron PC133, OEM Radeon DDR, 15gb Quantum Fireball+ LM, Fujitsu 5.25gb, Pioneer 32x slot load CDROM, SB Live! Value, LinkSys LNE100, Altec Lansing ACS45.2, Samsung Syncmaster 955DF, Sycom 300va UPS

                  Video Box
                  ------
                  Windows 2000Pro, PIII700 on ASUS CUBX, 256mb Micron PC133, Vanilla G400/32 (PD5.14), Hauppage WinTV-DBX, LinkSys LNE100, 8.4gb Maxtor HD, 40gb 7200 Western Digital, Diamond Fireport 40 SCSI, Pioneer 32x SCSI Slot load CDROM, Pioneer 10x Slot load DVD, Yamaha 4416s burner, MX300, Panasonic Panasync S70

                  Feline Tech Support
                  -------------
                  Jinx the Grey Thundercat, Mischa (Shilsner?)(still MIA)

                  ...currently working on the world's first C64 based parallel computing project

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    the P3800 @ 133 is not that much hotter than a 700 @ 100 with the same HS!
                    The P3 700 was 5 degres cooler.

                    All of these checked with an MSI6337 I815 MB.
                    The wendor we get these sinks from doesent have a clue at all.
                    they claime that they will work up to 933MHz!

                    They have repeatedly sent me SECC2 collers when i have ordered Athlon coolers.

                    But It survived 15 hours of 99% load!!!

                    Going to get a better HS altough!
                    If there's artificial intelligence, there's bound to be some artificial stupidity.

                    Jeremy Clarkson "806 brake horsepower..and that on that limp wrist faerie liquid the Americans call petrol, if you run it on the more explosive jungle juice we have in Europe you'd be getting 850 brake horsepower..."

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      "... and don't forget that these reportings didn't include the ambient temperatures which can greatly affect chip temperature readings."

                      This confirms my suspicion that I am far too long-winded, and no one reads my posts to the end.

                      Paul
                      paulcs@flashcom.net

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Yes Paul, you did very well. See class, you can all learn from Paul's example.

                        If you haven't noticed, I've been on a crusade these last few weeks to get people to get into the habit of telling a more complete story when it comes to temperature readings. It just makes these comparisons a bit more meaningful. Sorry Paul ... I should have pointed out your thoroughness.
                        <TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          DAMN!!!! My ears are burning....LOL

                          Oh!! He means the other Paul...LOL

                          Xortam got me too awhile back.

                          Paul

                          [This message has been edited by ALBPM (edited 10 September 2000).]
                          "Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself"

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I just made a modification to my cooling setup. I was running a P3-800 FCPGA with an Alpha PEP66 on a ABIT BX133 mobo.

                            I was running at 1.85v, 125MHZ FSB @ 1000MHz. My temps were-->Room temp= 23 degC, Case temp= 30 degC, mobo temp= 32 degC, CPU temp range= 32-38 degC.

                            Yesterday I installed a 52 watt Leufkins Peltier kit on my PEP66. I am now running at 1.9v, 129MHz @ 1032MHz very stable.
                            My new temps are-->Room temp= 23 degC, Case temp= 30 degC, mobo temp= 32 degC, CPU temp range= 19-24 degC-->idle to full load.

                            The 52 watt peltier is a conservative effort for a P3 and I don't think I'll have a freezing and condensation problem with this.

                            Paul
                            "Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself"

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Now thats cool! It will be interesting to see what that Peltier does on a scorcher of a day. I'd guess you may still get one of those in the next month. How hot does your room get ... worst case? I thought I read that the P3-800 wasn't a great O/C'er. I guess you proved that wrong. Are the faster P3 CPUs worth trying to OC? I wonder if I could get the 800 to work in my Asus P2B-S, v1.03?
                              <TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X