While I monitor the the motherboard & CPU temp in BIOS, it takes 10 min for my CPU to go from 52°F to 204°F and my motherboard to go to 82°F. I assumed my original Intel 775 heatsink was not adequate so I bought the best of the best to cool my CPU. According to www.anandtech.com, the best coolers for my CPU which I bought are: (1) Thermalright Ultra-120 Extreme heatsink, (2) Scythe Flex SFF21F (1600 rpm) 3-pin fan. I spread the thermal paste on top of my CPU and at the bottom of the heatsink. I then plugged the 3-pin fan into the CPU fan connector on the MOBO. Because the MOBO has a 4 pin header and the fourth pin is for the PWM (Pulse-Width Modulation), I left the 4th pin open and set the BIOS setting for fan mode to DC (the other mode is PWM) Here are my specs: ASUS P5GDC-V deluxe MOBO, Intel 775 3GHZ processor, 1 GB RAM. I have the latest BIOS update 1011. I swapped the CPU with a new CPU & it still happens. I even tried Artic silver thermal paste. What the heck is going on?
2007-11-23
11:05:13
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7 answers
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asked by
Carlos Castaneda
2
in
Computers & Internet
➔ Hardware
➔ Desktops
The fans are working and the CPU is not overclocked. The MOBO is super-clean, there is no dust in the computer which is well ventilated. I had alot of thermal paste on the heatsink and CPU. I spread it around the entire CPU and heatsink.
2007-11-23
11:17:31 ·
update #1
I am going to try the answer which said that I may have too much paste. I will try it with one small blob in the middle.
2007-11-23
11:18:18 ·
update #2
Regarding whether my MOBO is being fried with too much voltage, I am using a brandnew $130 ANTEC Phantom 500 (ATX 12, 2.01. I also tried using Antec's NEO 480.
2007-11-23
11:22:30 ·
update #3
I am definitely sure that I am not overclocking. The MOBO has that feature, and I have never used it.
2007-11-23
11:51:44 ·
update #4
When I took the cpu out of the mobo, all of the pins were bent down. This caused the overheating.
2007-11-23
13:31:56 ·
update #5