Je hebt een klacht over de onderstaande posting:
http://www.pcplus.co.uk/tips/default.asp?pagetypeid=2&articleid=16113&subsectionid=383&subsubsectionid=91 There can’t be an exact universal answer to that, but as a rule of thumb we feel that 40 degrees Celsius is in the right parish. We arrived at this figure by the following unscientific method: AMD’s technical documentation states that the difference in temperature between the die and the bottom of the CPU is about 30 degrees. To this we add a fudge factor to account for imperfections in the sensor, which we guesstimate from information on several pages including http://mikewarrior.freeservers.com. So, if the maximum die temperature is 95 degrees, anything over 55 begins to get worrying if you hope to be using the same processor two or three years from now. Over 65 is pushing into live fast, die young territory. The processor won’t burn out unless things get really out of hand, but the life expectancy reduces exponentially. At maximum core temperature, it may be down to one or ...
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