On 1/26/2023 6:39 PM, Barry wrote:


On 26 Jan 2023, at 17:32, Thomas Passin <li...@tompassin.net> wrote:

On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin <li...@tompassin.net> wrote:
A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world.  I've had a number
of laptops that overheat (or would, if I let test program continue)
running this test program.
Define "overheat". If all you're saying is "the fan began to whine and
I got annoyed so I shut off the program", that is absolutely NOT
overheating.

CPU core temperatures up to 95 deg C and rising rapidly, as reported by a 
number of utilities including NZXT and CoreTemp.  Max junction temperature is 
given as 100 deg C, and I don't want to risk reducing the lifetime of my  CPU.

Silicon junctions melt something like 400C ish not 100C.
The max you see is the operating temp of the CPU.

Of course I know the junction isn't going to melt at 100 deg C. We're not talking low temperature solder here!

For intel CPU if you go beyond what the slow clocking can deal with the CPU 
turns itself off to prevent damage.

Intel did this to stop people asking for replacement parts when there cooling 
was at fault.

Barry


Maybe five or ten minutes at or above 100 deg C every few months might not make 
a noticeable lifetime difference, who knows?  I don't want to make a habit of 
it.  I wouldn't drive my car very long with a low oil pressure warning active, 
either.
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