How to monitor CPU-GPU temperature and load in Windows 10?The difference between GPU and CPUSecond CPU...
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How to monitor CPU-GPU temperature and load in Windows 10?
The difference between GPU and CPUSecond CPU missing of Dual Core550W PSU, i5 (3.2ghz), 8gb DDR3 and 12V Rail is at 8VBIOS upgrade lowers CPU temperatureSempron 3500+ never clocking up (always at 800MHz)GPU temperature very highMonitor cpu temperature of a computer in my networkCPU core temperature high and cycling, @100% CPU load Asus Z170 Deluxe, i7-6700KSafe Temperature for GPU and CPU while gaming in laptopHow can I decide the exact value for some parameters in computer hardware?
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I am used to monitor system's characteristics by lm-sensors hddtemp psensor
in Ubuntu Linux.
I would like to get a similar monitoring setting as psensor
in Windows 10 Enterprise.
My processor is the third generation i7, i7-3770, with socket 1155.
The Open Hardware Monitor -application does not support it.
It would be great some software which supports my CPU.
I am using GTX 9** GPUs.
I am experimenting both answers. The most relevant part of CPU monitoring is to estimate the power usage.
OHM does not have drivers for i7-3770 but it still tries to estimate the power of my processor, which is a wrong way of doing these estimations. Max temperatures of CPU in different programs
- BIOS UEFI utility - EZ Mode. CPU temperature +35 C in 5 min running but this is only physical CPU temperature so may ignore core 2 and 3.
- Windows 10 Enterprise, OHM at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 55 C, 2 75 C, 3 110 C. Impossible!
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 38 C, 2 34 C, 3 33 C.
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at CPU heavy load for 5 minutes. 60 C, 0 51, 1 67 C, 2 67 C, 3 54 C,
- Windows 10 Enterprise, CPUid.
CPUid and OHM simultaneously in Windows 10 Enterprise
A ticket sent about the case here in OHM. Issue sent also in freenode's #hardware-monitor channel.
How can you monitor characteristics of CPU and GPU in Windows 10 Enterprise?
windows-10 cpu gpu monitoring
add a comment |
I am used to monitor system's characteristics by lm-sensors hddtemp psensor
in Ubuntu Linux.
I would like to get a similar monitoring setting as psensor
in Windows 10 Enterprise.
My processor is the third generation i7, i7-3770, with socket 1155.
The Open Hardware Monitor -application does not support it.
It would be great some software which supports my CPU.
I am using GTX 9** GPUs.
I am experimenting both answers. The most relevant part of CPU monitoring is to estimate the power usage.
OHM does not have drivers for i7-3770 but it still tries to estimate the power of my processor, which is a wrong way of doing these estimations. Max temperatures of CPU in different programs
- BIOS UEFI utility - EZ Mode. CPU temperature +35 C in 5 min running but this is only physical CPU temperature so may ignore core 2 and 3.
- Windows 10 Enterprise, OHM at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 55 C, 2 75 C, 3 110 C. Impossible!
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 38 C, 2 34 C, 3 33 C.
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at CPU heavy load for 5 minutes. 60 C, 0 51, 1 67 C, 2 67 C, 3 54 C,
- Windows 10 Enterprise, CPUid.
CPUid and OHM simultaneously in Windows 10 Enterprise
A ticket sent about the case here in OHM. Issue sent also in freenode's #hardware-monitor channel.
How can you monitor characteristics of CPU and GPU in Windows 10 Enterprise?
windows-10 cpu gpu monitoring
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45
add a comment |
I am used to monitor system's characteristics by lm-sensors hddtemp psensor
in Ubuntu Linux.
I would like to get a similar monitoring setting as psensor
in Windows 10 Enterprise.
My processor is the third generation i7, i7-3770, with socket 1155.
The Open Hardware Monitor -application does not support it.
It would be great some software which supports my CPU.
I am using GTX 9** GPUs.
I am experimenting both answers. The most relevant part of CPU monitoring is to estimate the power usage.
OHM does not have drivers for i7-3770 but it still tries to estimate the power of my processor, which is a wrong way of doing these estimations. Max temperatures of CPU in different programs
- BIOS UEFI utility - EZ Mode. CPU temperature +35 C in 5 min running but this is only physical CPU temperature so may ignore core 2 and 3.
- Windows 10 Enterprise, OHM at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 55 C, 2 75 C, 3 110 C. Impossible!
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 38 C, 2 34 C, 3 33 C.
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at CPU heavy load for 5 minutes. 60 C, 0 51, 1 67 C, 2 67 C, 3 54 C,
- Windows 10 Enterprise, CPUid.
CPUid and OHM simultaneously in Windows 10 Enterprise
A ticket sent about the case here in OHM. Issue sent also in freenode's #hardware-monitor channel.
How can you monitor characteristics of CPU and GPU in Windows 10 Enterprise?
windows-10 cpu gpu monitoring
I am used to monitor system's characteristics by lm-sensors hddtemp psensor
in Ubuntu Linux.
I would like to get a similar monitoring setting as psensor
in Windows 10 Enterprise.
My processor is the third generation i7, i7-3770, with socket 1155.
The Open Hardware Monitor -application does not support it.
It would be great some software which supports my CPU.
I am using GTX 9** GPUs.
I am experimenting both answers. The most relevant part of CPU monitoring is to estimate the power usage.
OHM does not have drivers for i7-3770 but it still tries to estimate the power of my processor, which is a wrong way of doing these estimations. Max temperatures of CPU in different programs
- BIOS UEFI utility - EZ Mode. CPU temperature +35 C in 5 min running but this is only physical CPU temperature so may ignore core 2 and 3.
- Windows 10 Enterprise, OHM at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 55 C, 2 75 C, 3 110 C. Impossible!
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at rest. Physical 38 C, 0 33 C, 1 38 C, 2 34 C, 3 33 C.
- Ubuntu 14.10, psensor at CPU heavy load for 5 minutes. 60 C, 0 51, 1 67 C, 2 67 C, 3 54 C,
- Windows 10 Enterprise, CPUid.
CPUid and OHM simultaneously in Windows 10 Enterprise
A ticket sent about the case here in OHM. Issue sent also in freenode's #hardware-monitor channel.
How can you monitor characteristics of CPU and GPU in Windows 10 Enterprise?
windows-10 cpu gpu monitoring
windows-10 cpu gpu monitoring
edited Jan 4 '16 at 13:36
Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
asked Jan 3 '16 at 19:32
Léo Léopold Hertz 준영Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
2,078955103
2,078955103
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45
add a comment |
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
I would recommend using a program called Open Disk Monitor. It is able to list information from the various sensors located in your computer's hardware.
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
add a comment |
I would recommend HW Monitor from CPUID. It has a freeware version and can provided you with temperature information, fan speed information and voltages.
I have not used this software on windows 10 myself, but I expect it will work and satisfy your need for information.
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
It is more of a Real-Time monitor, but it also logs the information it captures. I hope that is what you meant by characteristics.
add a comment |
I keep both CPUID HW Monitor and TechPowerUp GPU-Z on my machine. HW Monitor I like that you can see current sensor information for Value as well as Min and Max values, all displayed side by side. Lots's of information (also, it's very similar to Open Disk Monitor). The reason I like keeping GPU-Z is that it provides a wealth of information about the GPU itself in addition to displaying sensor setting. This could come in handy should you need to provide card information when requesting tech assistance. Both seem to be wonderful products and run well on WIN 10 64-bit.
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ yesterday
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I would recommend using a program called Open Disk Monitor. It is able to list information from the various sensors located in your computer's hardware.
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
add a comment |
I would recommend using a program called Open Disk Monitor. It is able to list information from the various sensors located in your computer's hardware.
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
add a comment |
I would recommend using a program called Open Disk Monitor. It is able to list information from the various sensors located in your computer's hardware.
I would recommend using a program called Open Disk Monitor. It is able to list information from the various sensors located in your computer's hardware.
answered Jan 3 '16 at 19:39
Eric JohnsonEric Johnson
396518
396518
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
add a comment |
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
I updated the body of my question. My CPU is i7-3770 which does not seem to be supported by the software. It would be great to have some software which supports my system.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 3 '16 at 19:45
1
1
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
Try this one. If it works, I will post it as an answer: cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:01
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@EricJohnson Oh Eric, I just posted that as an answer. Don't be so shy to post it right away ;)
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:44
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@StaticStorm After posting one not working one, I did not want to post another answer
– Eric Johnson
Jan 3 '16 at 20:46
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
@EricJohnson oh yes, I missed the fact that you posted the initial answer, my bad. :) I thought you only commented.
– Static Storm
Jan 3 '16 at 20:48
add a comment |
I would recommend HW Monitor from CPUID. It has a freeware version and can provided you with temperature information, fan speed information and voltages.
I have not used this software on windows 10 myself, but I expect it will work and satisfy your need for information.
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
It is more of a Real-Time monitor, but it also logs the information it captures. I hope that is what you meant by characteristics.
add a comment |
I would recommend HW Monitor from CPUID. It has a freeware version and can provided you with temperature information, fan speed information and voltages.
I have not used this software on windows 10 myself, but I expect it will work and satisfy your need for information.
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
It is more of a Real-Time monitor, but it also logs the information it captures. I hope that is what you meant by characteristics.
add a comment |
I would recommend HW Monitor from CPUID. It has a freeware version and can provided you with temperature information, fan speed information and voltages.
I have not used this software on windows 10 myself, but I expect it will work and satisfy your need for information.
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
It is more of a Real-Time monitor, but it also logs the information it captures. I hope that is what you meant by characteristics.
I would recommend HW Monitor from CPUID. It has a freeware version and can provided you with temperature information, fan speed information and voltages.
I have not used this software on windows 10 myself, but I expect it will work and satisfy your need for information.
http://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
It is more of a Real-Time monitor, but it also logs the information it captures. I hope that is what you meant by characteristics.
answered Jan 3 '16 at 20:42
Static StormStatic Storm
5001410
5001410
add a comment |
add a comment |
I keep both CPUID HW Monitor and TechPowerUp GPU-Z on my machine. HW Monitor I like that you can see current sensor information for Value as well as Min and Max values, all displayed side by side. Lots's of information (also, it's very similar to Open Disk Monitor). The reason I like keeping GPU-Z is that it provides a wealth of information about the GPU itself in addition to displaying sensor setting. This could come in handy should you need to provide card information when requesting tech assistance. Both seem to be wonderful products and run well on WIN 10 64-bit.
add a comment |
I keep both CPUID HW Monitor and TechPowerUp GPU-Z on my machine. HW Monitor I like that you can see current sensor information for Value as well as Min and Max values, all displayed side by side. Lots's of information (also, it's very similar to Open Disk Monitor). The reason I like keeping GPU-Z is that it provides a wealth of information about the GPU itself in addition to displaying sensor setting. This could come in handy should you need to provide card information when requesting tech assistance. Both seem to be wonderful products and run well on WIN 10 64-bit.
add a comment |
I keep both CPUID HW Monitor and TechPowerUp GPU-Z on my machine. HW Monitor I like that you can see current sensor information for Value as well as Min and Max values, all displayed side by side. Lots's of information (also, it's very similar to Open Disk Monitor). The reason I like keeping GPU-Z is that it provides a wealth of information about the GPU itself in addition to displaying sensor setting. This could come in handy should you need to provide card information when requesting tech assistance. Both seem to be wonderful products and run well on WIN 10 64-bit.
I keep both CPUID HW Monitor and TechPowerUp GPU-Z on my machine. HW Monitor I like that you can see current sensor information for Value as well as Min and Max values, all displayed side by side. Lots's of information (also, it's very similar to Open Disk Monitor). The reason I like keeping GPU-Z is that it provides a wealth of information about the GPU itself in addition to displaying sensor setting. This could come in handy should you need to provide card information when requesting tech assistance. Both seem to be wonderful products and run well on WIN 10 64-bit.
answered Nov 22 '16 at 10:09
John B.John B.
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ yesterday
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?
Downvoter! Leave a comment.
– Léo Léopold Hertz 준영
Jan 4 '16 at 9:45