[SLUG] lm_sensors; sensors -f; computer too hot?

From: Mario Lombardo (mario@alienscience.com)
Date: Tue Jan 17 2006 - 17:31:23 EST


>From the lm_sensors package, I got this from running:
sensors -f
---------------------------------------
it87-isa-0290
Adapter: ISA adapter
VCore 1: +1.62 V (min = +1.42 V, max = +1.57 V) ALARM
VCore 2: +2.48 V (min = +2.40 V, max = +2.61 V)
+3.3V: +6.66 V (min = +3.14 V, max = +3.46 V) ALARM
+5V: +4.84 V (min = +4.76 V, max = +5.24 V)
+12V: +12.03 V (min = +11.39 V, max = +12.61 V)
-12V: -0.12 V (min = -12.63 V, max = -11.41 V) ALARM
-5V: -9.07 V (min = -5.26 V, max = -4.77 V) ALARM
Stdby: +5.08 V (min = +4.76 V, max = +5.24 V)
VBat: +3.54 V
fan1: 4753 RPM (min = 0 RPM, div = 2)
fan2: 0 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) ALARM
fan3: 0 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) ALARM
M/B Temp: +109 F (low = +59 F, high = +104 F) sensor = thermistor
CPU Temp: +120 F (low = +59 F, high = +113 F) sensor = thermistor
Temp3: +118 F (low = +59 F, high = +113 F) sensor = thermistor

eeprom-i2c-0-50
Adapter: SMBus SIS630 adapter at 5080
Memory type: SDR SDRAM DIMM
Memory size (MB): 512
---------------------------------------

ALARM??? My BIOS doesn't read voltages that high. Do you think I should take
action? My computer has been hard-locking for quite some time. I tested the
memory with memtest86 and with Microsoft's memory tester. Both showed good
results. I wonder if it's a thermal thing, but these results don't match
each other (BIOS vs. sensors program), so I can't determine which one is
false.

/mario

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