Neosymbio wrote:Cooling is one thing I'm not very learned in. I know my graphics card has a fan on it. I haven't been able to open my PC's case because it's under bestbuy warranty. It's a Gateway FX gaming PC, so hopefully it's properly cooled.
How would I go about monitoring my temp, and what's an acceptable range? I figured this out from another thread, I'm using CoreTemp. What's the maximum safe temp I should look for?
CoreTemp or SpeedFan for CPU temp; GPUz for GPU temp.
I would agree 108C is too hot for the GPU. Supposedly they are good to 100C, but I wouldn't do that constantly. My ATI 4670 runs in the low 60s.
Most current Quad-core desktop CPUs have a max core temp of about 70C (100C for laptop CPUs). You will likely see full-load temps in the 40s and 50s, which are fine (my Q9650 runs in the high 40s in a 70F room). You might see as high as 65C in a hot (80F+) room, but I wouldn't run them any hotter than that (my Q9650 got to 63C in a real hot spell in Seattle, no A/C).
If you run 4 x CPU clients on the CPU instead of the SMP client, you'll likely see more temperature difference by running all the clients at reduced CPU load, rather than running only 3 clients at full CPU load. I see only 1-2C difference when I shut down 1 of my laptop CPU clients. BTW, don't mess with core affinity; use the default "unlocked" setting.
If you try the SMP client, the Deino client supposedly is more robust (fewer errors with LAN outages, etc), but 64-bit requires the MPICH client. You'll have to download the 6.23 client of choice, install it, then replace the executable with the updated 6.24 version.