High CPU temperatures (123C)

3

AIDA64 is telling me that my CPU package temp gets to 125C. That is incredibly hot. My cpu core temps stay at ~31C though.

Should I be worried about a high package temp? What is a CPU package? Should I reapply my heat sink and thermal paste?

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Paul Knopf

Posted 2012-02-05T06:20:30.470

Reputation: 177

2That sounds impossible to be honest (that there is such a large difference between the two) – soandos – 2012-02-05T06:52:04.257

1Is your mainboard chipset listed as being compatible with AIDA64? – Tog – 2012-02-05T10:43:45.830

Can you please review the image I attached to my question? Does anything look out of the ordinary? – Paul Knopf – 2012-02-05T19:23:28.747

Aside from the one temperature almost high enough to bake a cake? No, not really; all the other readings look pretty good—I wish my system ran cool. (The +12V and -5V are off by quite a bit though, so you may want to check if you have a good PSU or a cheap one that came with the case.) – Synetech – 2012-02-05T20:07:25.250

@PaulKnopf the only thing out of the ordinary is your actual "CPU" temperature. Given the values of the other sensors I would very much doubt that that temperature is correct. Your other temperatures look fine and I would suspect that the "CPU" temperature is a sensor being read or labelled wrongly. – Mokubai – 2012-02-05T20:23:43.817

@Syneteck, I have a bronze certified PSU that cost me $100. It forget the model but it is a high end one. – Paul Knopf – 2012-02-06T05:18:37.307

Answers

7

It sounds like you are getting a mis-matched label (the sun’s corona may be hotter than its surface, but the CPU’s package would not be hotter than its cores). Check all of the available temperatures and look at the ones in the normal range. There is often a reading that is bizarre (the one on my systems have usually been something like -50°C). The highest one is usually the CPU while the next highest is usually the system temp (ie, inside the case, or around the CPU, which is likely what is being called “package”).

If you can edit the labels, do so because due to variations in design (despite standards), monitoring programs can only label readings like temperatures and fan speeds based on statistical commonalities if they don’t have specific information. In other words, unless AIDA knows about what numbers are for what for your specific motherboard, it can only label them according to what they usually are (eg, Temp1=CPU, etc. even if that turns out not to be the case).

I found a page where someone asked about what a “package temp” is, but there is only speculation. This page has a more assertive answer about it being the temperature of the whole CPU (like the normal CPU temperature of single-core CPUs). And this page gives an even more definitive answer about how package temps. are unreliable and only the core temperature is relevant (which makes sense since the core temp. would be higher than the package temp. anyway).

Update:

Also, watch the high temperature for a while to see if it fluctuates at all. Try doing something to increase CPU usage such as watching a Flash video or playing a 3D game. Does it go up or down? If it remains unchanged, what may be happening is that it is not an actual reading at all, but rather just a reported maximum value. In other words, what may be happening is that the CPU is reporting that the CPU package can tolerate up to 123°C, and some monitoring programs (like AIDA) are incorrectly reporting that as an actual reading.

You may want to cross-reference the values you see in AIDA with some other monitoring programs such as SpeedFan, Real Temp, HWiNFO, Core Temp, etc. Other programs may have better hardware databases and can correctly report it as a maximum supported temp. rather than a current temp.

Synetech

Posted 2012-02-05T06:20:30.470

Reputation: 63 242

1+1: Referencing one of life's biggest mysteries: the temp of the Sun's corona. – surfasb – 2012-02-05T10:02:24.477

Can you please review the image I attached to my question? Does anything look out of the ordinary? – Paul Knopf – 2012-02-05T19:23:17.483

That high reading may not be a reading at all. I added some more information and suggestion to my answer. – Synetech – 2012-02-05T20:10:16.980

1

I wouldn't believe the data you're getting. It's really not possible for the package to be that much hotter than the core. Think about it, the package can only get hot if the core heats it up. And if the package is still that hot, how did the core cool down?

David Schwartz

Posted 2012-02-05T06:20:30.470

Reputation: 58 310

Can you please review the image I attached to my question? Does anything look out of the ordinary? – Paul Knopf – 2012-02-05T19:23:23.100