Is it just be or is every manufactuere built PC, e.g. Packard Bell, HP, Emachines etc built without adequete cooling?
Every dell desktop/workstation I have ever worked on runs red hot, I installed several Pentium 4 3Ghz desktops which has no fan over the CPU heatsink.
Today I bought a nice little Packard Bell unit at a car boot to replace my aging P3 home server. It's an Athlon XP 1900+ with 512MB Ram etc. Its been running about 20 minutes now, cpu usage at 0% as theres nothing running on it. Bios shows the CPU temp is 59c...
60c is near to the cut off point for these chip's isnt it?
I honestly think I am missing something. When I build a PC I make sure primarily the CPU and HDD are cool and well within operating temperatures. But when I work on a prebuilt machine they are always running hot, and I have yet to see one with any kind of cooling on the HDD. I have a Maxtor in this new PC I got today and its scalding.
Whats your opinion on this?
Chris.
Every dell desktop/workstation I have ever worked on runs red hot, I installed several Pentium 4 3Ghz desktops which has no fan over the CPU heatsink.
Today I bought a nice little Packard Bell unit at a car boot to replace my aging P3 home server. It's an Athlon XP 1900+ with 512MB Ram etc. Its been running about 20 minutes now, cpu usage at 0% as theres nothing running on it. Bios shows the CPU temp is 59c...
60c is near to the cut off point for these chip's isnt it?
I honestly think I am missing something. When I build a PC I make sure primarily the CPU and HDD are cool and well within operating temperatures. But when I work on a prebuilt machine they are always running hot, and I have yet to see one with any kind of cooling on the HDD. I have a Maxtor in this new PC I got today and its scalding.
Whats your opinion on this?
Chris.