OCCT v4.3.2 Power Supply test looks to be the best. It tests everything concurrently. Not sure I would run this too long or un-attended. Safety cut-off for cores at 85c looks to be a good idea.
Looks like HW-Monitor is built-in, but amps for CPU and GPU are missing for some reason.
In OCCT, you can turn-on and rename TMPIN0 and FANIN0.
If you hit the lookup button, it takes you to a site with specs, the picture of the card there looks really cool, compared to the black plastic bag this one has around it.
Also, I stopped the test at 6.5 minutes, as the cpu max temp on one core had hit 100 degrees Celsius, and was averaging in the mid 90's. Still no fan speed from PSU, couldn't hear anything from inside either but the video card fan could have been going fast, not sure.
Why does support just hang up on you randomly. Or keep saying wrong dept and transfer back and forth between sales and support? I was transferred 9 times last call back and forth until they just hung up again. They say there are no managers or supervisors there, is that why they get away with it?
Also, I stopped the test at 6.5 minutes, as the cpu max temp on one core had hit 100 degrees Celsius, and was averaging in the mid 90's. Still no fan speed from PSU, couldn't hear anything from inside either but the video card fan could have been going fast, not sure.
I guess this is the OCCT Power-Supply-Test on one of your Aurora-R5's with small Power-Supplies and just the fan-cpu-cooler.
That seems too hot. Maybe the fans should be turning (or spinning faster) to help expel more heat from case?
On my machine all the fans pick-up a bit and keep CPU and GPU under 75c.
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.3K Posts
0
December 20th, 2012 20:00
After running MS-SE, Heaven, OCCT, and HeavyLoad. Value is Idle. Look at Max column.
Fans/FANIN0 is Asetek CPU cooler Radiator fan.
HD5870/Temps/TMPIN0 : I think the top hotter one is the GPU-chip, the lower one is likely the circuit board near the chip or ram.
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.3K Posts
0
December 21st, 2012 02:00
OCCT v4.3.2 Power Supply test looks to be the best. It tests everything concurrently. Not sure I would run this too long or un-attended. Safety cut-off for cores at 85c looks to be a good idea.
Looks like HW-Monitor is built-in, but amps for CPU and GPU are missing for some reason.
In OCCT, you can turn-on and rename TMPIN0 and FANIN0.
See Max. column
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.3K Posts
0
December 21st, 2012 02:00
Res. was set a notch lower (than native desktop) and 3D was running in a large window. The pic in above post was from the same run.
Ryye
25 Posts
0
December 26th, 2016 09:00
It show PCIe X 16 3.0 @ x8.1.1
Clock speed: 1506 Mhz
Memory: 2002 Mhz
Boost: 1683 Mhz
Bus: 256 bit
If you hit the lookup button, it takes you to a site with specs, the picture of the card there looks really cool, compared to the black plastic bag this one has around it.
Also, I stopped the test at 6.5 minutes, as the cpu max temp on one core had hit 100 degrees Celsius, and was averaging in the mid 90's. Still no fan speed from PSU, couldn't hear anything from inside either but the video card fan could have been going fast, not sure.
Why does support just hang up on you randomly. Or keep saying wrong dept and transfer back and forth between sales and support? I was transferred 9 times last call back and forth until they just hung up again. They say there are no managers or supervisors there, is that why they get away with it?
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.3K Posts
0
December 26th, 2016 12:00
I guess this is the OCCT Power-Supply-Test on one of your Aurora-R5's with small Power-Supplies and just the fan-cpu-cooler.
That seems too hot. Maybe the fans should be turning (or spinning faster) to help expel more heat from case?
On my machine all the fans pick-up a bit and keep CPU and GPU under 75c.