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#1
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hello
ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu temperature censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this go between the cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. |
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#2
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read the manual
david colley wrote: > hello > ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu temperature > censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this go between the > cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. > > |
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#3
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It is actually a SENSOR
"david colley" <davidcolley1964@ntlworld.com> wrote in message news:ObExmPzBGHA.3152@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > hello > ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu > temperature censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this > go between the cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. > |
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#4
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"david colley" <davidcolley1964@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:ObExmPzBGHA.3152@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > hello > ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu > temperature censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this > go between the cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. > hello [Hello] ive [I'm] currently building a new system [missing period] anyway [superfluous] the [The] new tower has [a] CPU temperature censor [sensor] on it [missing period] now [superfluous] there [There] is a very find wire from it [missing period] does [Does] this go between the CPU and the fan [missing period] thanks [Thanks] [missing period] dave [Dave, on newline] Review your posts before submitting them. You are trying to convery to OTHERS what you are *trying* to say. The above was just a guess at what you might have actually meant to say. No identification of brand of CPU. No identification of model. "A very fine wire from it". What might "it" be? The fan clips or screws onto the heatsink and the only wire from the fan is its power (2 wires) and sense (1 wire) using a 3-wire plug that connects to a 3-pin header on the motherboard marked for the CPU fan. "Between the CPU and the fan" should be a heatsink. If the fan is on the CPU, it is either a very old slow CPU, like a 386 or 486 (or Cyrix's equivalents, maybe) but which often never had fans since radiant transmission of heat was sufficient from a small heatsink glued atop the CPU, or this user forgot to install the heatsink. Between the fan and CPU should be a heatsink. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375 -- __________________________________________________ Post replies to the newsgroup - Share with others. E-mail: Remove "NIX" and append "#VC811" to Subject. __________________________________________________ |
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#5
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Need a little more info, such as, what is 'fine', where does it come from,
your power supply? and is it just one wire, or two, what sort of connector does it have, and why do you think it is a wire with a sensor on it? By the way, all lower case and no punctuation makes a post about as hard to read as all caps. Joe "david colley" <davidcolley1964@ntlworld.com> wrote in message news:ObExmPzBGHA.3152@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > hello > ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu temperature > censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this go between the > cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. > > |
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#6
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Vanguard,
Thanks for clearing up that garbage of a post. I think trying to diagnose his post is more difficult than what he is trying to figure out with his sensor and CPU. "Vanguard" wrote: > "david colley" <davidcolley1964@ntlworld.com> wrote in message > news:ObExmPzBGHA.3152@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > > hello > > ive currently building a new system anyway the new tower has cpu > > temperature censer on it now there is a very fine wire from it does this > > go between the cpu and the fan any ideas thanks dave. > > > > > hello [Hello] > ive [I'm] currently building a new system [missing period] > anyway [superfluous] > the [The] new tower has [a] CPU temperature censor [sensor] on it [missing > period] > now [superfluous] > there [There] is a very find wire from it [missing period] > does [Does] this go between the CPU and the fan [missing period] > thanks [Thanks] [missing period] > dave [Dave, on newline] > > Review your posts before submitting them. You are trying to convery to > OTHERS what you are *trying* to say. The above was just a guess at what you > might have actually meant to say. > > No identification of brand of CPU. No identification of model. "A very > fine wire from it". What might "it" be? The fan clips or screws onto the > heatsink and the only wire from the fan is its power (2 wires) and sense (1 > wire) using a 3-wire plug that connects to a 3-pin header on the motherboard > marked for the CPU fan. "Between the CPU and the fan" should be a heatsink. > If the fan is on the CPU, it is either a very old slow CPU, like a 386 or > 486 (or Cyrix's equivalents, maybe) but which often never had fans since > radiant transmission of heat was sufficient from a small heatsink glued atop > the CPU, or this user forgot to install the heatsink. Between the fan and > CPU should be a heatsink. > > http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm > http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375 > > -- > __________________________________________________ > Post replies to the newsgroup - Share with others. > E-mail: Remove "NIX" and append "#VC811" to Subject. > __________________________________________________ > > |
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#7
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It's not "censer", it's "sensor". Learn to spell, and while you are at it,
learn how to punctuate. Most people won't bother to go through the extra effort of attempting to interpret a poorly written message. |
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#8
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"Ryan" <Ryan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:B69F24CE-9A3D-42C0-8A65-48EE01E3387B@microsoft.com... > Vanguard, > > Thanks for clearing up that garbage of a post. I think trying to diagnose > his post is more difficult than what he is trying to figure out with his > sensor and CPU. My guess is the "fine wire" is not just one wire but a set of 3 wires (which really aren't that fine; i.e., they aren't as small as inferred) and the OP doesn't know where to connect it. This is a user that should NOT be building his own computer. I can see him trying to jam in the memory modules in backwards without a clue that they are keyed to the slot. |
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#9
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Vanguard wrote: > "Ryan" <Ryan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:B69F24CE-9A3D-42C0-8A65-48EE01E3387B@microsoft.com... > >> Vanguard, >> >> Thanks for clearing up that garbage of a post. I think trying to diagnose >> his post is more difficult than what he is trying to figure out with his >> sensor and CPU. > > > > My guess is the "fine wire" is not just one wire but a set of 3 wires > (which really aren't that fine; i.e., they aren't as small as inferred) > and the OP doesn't know where to connect it. This is a user that should > NOT be building his own computer. I can see him trying to jam in the > memory modules in backwards without a clue that they are keyed to the slot. Back in the day, I soldered thermistors to 2-pin headers and connected them to the appropriate spot on the motherboard to measure CPU temperature. For the last several years, CPUs have had internal thermal diodes accessible to the motherboard chipset - so current motherboards don't have thermistor connections. If the OP's system is even remotely new, it does not have an external CPU temperature sensor. He's probably looking at a thermistor dangling out of the power supply, which the PSU uses to control it's fan speed based on case temperature. As 'Bob I' said, the OP should RTFM - or perhaps in this case, ask someone literate to RTFM for him. Sunny |
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