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Date:      Sun, 9 Jan 2000 03:31:04 -0800 (PST)
From:      "Rodney W. Grimes" <freebsd@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
To:        david@bushong.net (David Bushong)
Cc:        rjoseph@nwlink.com (R Joseph Wright), freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: CPU voltage (was Re: load spike strangeness)
Message-ID:  <200001091131.DAA18738@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
In-Reply-To: <20000108223540.A58762@Bushong.NET> from David Bushong at "Jan 8, 2000 10:35:40 pm"

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> On Sat, Jan 08, 2000 at 10:03:44PM -0800, R Joseph Wright wrote:
> > Awhile back I was having trouble getting through kernel compiles, the
> > machine would reboot during the compile.  Someone on some newsgroup said
> > "are you overclocking?".  I checked my settings.  No, I wasn't
> > overclocking.  But my voltage setting looked wrong.  It was set at 2.2
> > volts or whatever and I thought it was supposed to be at 2.4.  So I
> > changed it to 2.4.  My problem was solved.  I was flying through the
> > compiles.  Then I was looking through my motherboard manual and realized
> > that it was supposed to be set at 2.2 after all.  I prefer it the way it
> > is though.  Do you think there is anything wrong with that? 
> > 
> Hmm.  lmmon -i produces some scary results:
> 
>        Voltages
> 
>   Vcore1:   +2.781V
>   Vcore2:   +1.469V
>   + 3.3V:   +3.312V
>   + 5.0V:   +4.932V
>   +12.0V:  +12.250V	<--
Spec is +/- 5%, so 12 +5% is 13.2, your well within spec

>   -12.0V:  -13.125V	<--
Again spec is +-5%, so -12 -5% is -13.2, your in spec, a bit high,
but see below about light loaded power supplies, this is also one.

>   - 5.0V:   -5.532V	<--
Spec is +-5%, -5 -5% is -5.5v, your technically slightly out of spec,
but -5V is natorious for being out of spec, and about the only thing
that uses it any more in a PC is some of the RS-232 drivers.  The
reason it is often above spec is that there is no load on it any more
and most power supplies have a minimum load requirement of 100mA to
regulate correctly (most low current outputs on PC power supplies
are down with low cost linear regulators that need a minium 10%
of rated current load placed on them before they well regulate
correctly).


-- 
Rod Grimes - KD7CAX @ CN85sl - (RWG25)               rgrimes@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net


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