snowsurfer
El Mágico
- Messages
- 391
- Location
- Spain
Hey guys,
As some of you may know, I recently had an HD die on my (quite beloved) Dell XPS 1330. I just got my new HD yesterday, installed it, recovered my docs and PST from the failed drive (couldn't clone finally, boot partition on the old one seemed OK when connected to my desktop, but fully died when I tried to clone), but as I always move my user folder (My Documents, etc), as well as all the Outlook files and PST, to another partition, I managed to get everything back. [Note to everyone to do this: when HDs die if you have partitioned them VERY frequently the secondary (non boot) partitions will very probably be perfectly OK even if there are bad sectors on the boot partition and whatnot. If you keep the "username" folders and the PST on separate partitions you will most likely be able to recover fully, even if you do not have regular backups.]
I am now stress testing the laptop since it is my main tool while working abroad, and since my special Dell extended 24h worldwide warranty has expired, and I have an event in Qatar in early June, I really want to put it through its paces before I decide to trust it.
I just got myself the latest version of Prime95 and Core Temp for the task.
The CPU on my XPS 1330 is a T8300 Penryn (Santa Rosa platform) @ 2.40GHz for each of the two cores.
These are my (rather worrying) findings:
When the energy profile is set to max performance, my core temperatures at idle are around 55ºC. The lowest temp on startup is 49ºC. But when I stress it with Prime95, the cores go up to 98ºC for core 0 and 102ºC for core 1. When the fan (audibly) kicks in, it hardly seems to lower the temps at all.
Performing the same stress test at "economic" setting in power savings gets me max core temps of 70ºC or so. The cores are blocked at 1.2Ghz in this setting.
Anyway, what do you guys think about this? 102ºC for one of the cores seem crazy! 70ºC on half the regular frequency also seems FUBAR.
As some of you may know, I recently had an HD die on my (quite beloved) Dell XPS 1330. I just got my new HD yesterday, installed it, recovered my docs and PST from the failed drive (couldn't clone finally, boot partition on the old one seemed OK when connected to my desktop, but fully died when I tried to clone), but as I always move my user folder (My Documents, etc), as well as all the Outlook files and PST, to another partition, I managed to get everything back. [Note to everyone to do this: when HDs die if you have partitioned them VERY frequently the secondary (non boot) partitions will very probably be perfectly OK even if there are bad sectors on the boot partition and whatnot. If you keep the "username" folders and the PST on separate partitions you will most likely be able to recover fully, even if you do not have regular backups.]
I am now stress testing the laptop since it is my main tool while working abroad, and since my special Dell extended 24h worldwide warranty has expired, and I have an event in Qatar in early June, I really want to put it through its paces before I decide to trust it.
I just got myself the latest version of Prime95 and Core Temp for the task.
The CPU on my XPS 1330 is a T8300 Penryn (Santa Rosa platform) @ 2.40GHz for each of the two cores.
These are my (rather worrying) findings:
When the energy profile is set to max performance, my core temperatures at idle are around 55ºC. The lowest temp on startup is 49ºC. But when I stress it with Prime95, the cores go up to 98ºC for core 0 and 102ºC for core 1. When the fan (audibly) kicks in, it hardly seems to lower the temps at all.
Performing the same stress test at "economic" setting in power savings gets me max core temps of 70ºC or so. The cores are blocked at 1.2Ghz in this setting.
Anyway, what do you guys think about this? 102ºC for one of the cores seem crazy! 70ºC on half the regular frequency also seems FUBAR.