Hi, The temperature is also linked to the dust inside the box around the CPU, and the access space for fresh air.
But the minidump can be an issue related to the memory allocation. Here is the solution : http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=kb%3Ben-us%3B317277&x=12&y=6 To gain a 1/100 of millisecond I fine tuned my memory setup. I wasted many hours for reboot... The PC run like a cuckoo clock since the day I came back to memory default setup ! Hope this help Best regards Mike a écrit : > > > > Depends on the CPU. But, 60 degrees is not likely a problem. > > If your machine is overclocked, you may need to revisit your voltages > for stability. Be aware that increased voltages will increase > temperatures and reduce the life of your components. > > The symptoms you describe are also very common with memory problems. You > can run memtest86+ (freeware) to test your memory independent of the > rest of your machine. If it runs without issue for 24 hrs (some are > satisfied with 12 hours) your memory is not likely the problem. > > http://www.memtest.org/ <http://www.memtest.org/> > > Mike > > --- In [email protected] <mailto:amibroker%40yahoogroups.com>, > "Ara Kaloustian" <a...@...> wrote: > > > > I get a crash once or twice a day ... and always able to restart > automatically. > > > > I am tryingto debug issues, but one question: > > > > I had the CPU run at a temperature of about 60 degree centigrade for > a couple of days. > > Is that enough heat to damage the CPU ... and would it cause what > seems to be crashes at random times? > > > > Thanks > > > > Ara > > > >
