really appreciate it Got an answer form their support regarding the issue.

I've just bought and putting together my new desktop computer I haven't built a desktop computer in about 7 years so I'm new to a few things. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts .

strfox; submitter; 1 Build; 26 months ago; 3 points; Got an answer form their support regarding the issue.

I assembled a new PC on the Gigabyte z370n wifi chipset (rev 1.0). i5 6600k OC to 4.2 Ghz R9 390 16 GB of Ram I did memtest just today and it went through all the passes except I quit at the HammerTest test 13.

Monitor components such as the clocks and processor, set your fan preferred speed profile, create alerts when temperature gets too high or record your system’s behavior; these are the possibilities of the System Information View.

This is fine, they are all intake and operate below 700RPM at most times, which is basically silent.These are connected to the SYS_FAN_2 header, and in the image above, are running at 427 RPM at idle, in magenta color. I have the same issue with my Gigabyte Z170-HD3-CF TMPIN1 = -54 C Temperature 4 = 93 C My Power Supply is Seasonic 620 Watts Bronze. So, in order to use that sensor cable, you can:-(1) connect the 2-pin header to a 5.25'' or 3.5'' bay device (usually a fan controller) that has temp sensor header available. The all-new design is a testament to GIGABYTE's dedication to design quality. I don't know what this is.What I'd like to know if anybody knows what (or how to find out) each of these Temp NN are as reported by Argus? Any ideas ? Where would you place that sensor ? It depends on your requirement where do you want to check the temperature.Depends, you don't want to place it in the path of air being blown by a fan cause the temperature it'd be reporting would be wrong, unless I suppose your testing the temp of incoming air although if I wanted ambient air temp I'd have the sensor sitting somewhere external of the case.I looked at the manual and it calls it EC_Temp, it's a thermistor and thats all it tells one about it, there's no explanation as to how this sensor functions either separately or in conjunction with other internal sensors.To me, it seems like getting a thermistor makes sense if you want to measure the temperature of some extra component you have that does not come with heat sensors.I could think of the liquid temperature in a custom cooling loop for instance.Measuring the air temperature in the case doesn't make much sense for me (as temperatures are measured on CPU, GPU, VRMs, etc already by sensors, so why add a 2nd one?
My motherboard has a temperature sensor header and comes with what looks like a sensor. 1 x Q-Flash Plus button; 1 x Clear CMOS button; 2 x SMA antenna connectors (2T2R) 1 x USB Type-C™ port, with USB 3.2 Gen 2 support; 2 x USB 3.2 Gen … ... 2 x temperature sensor headers; 1 x power button; 1 x reset button; 2 x BIOS switches; 1 x Clear CMOS jumper; Voltage Measurement Points; Connectiques arrière. r/gigabyte: News, reviews and everything GIGABYTE related! Close. The chipset has 6 temperature sensors on the motherboard. Press J to jump to the feed. Where would you place that sensor ? So I suppose M.2 drives should have them too.

In UEFI you can drive your fans from any temperature input tough. I decided to put the programs aida64, to look at the temperatures. GIGABYTE System Information Viewer is a central location that gives you access to your current system status. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcutsCookies help us deliver our Services. Works great. 2.5" SATA III SSDs have. Here's the "Fan Speed" tab:As you can see, there are currently "3" fans in the system:The AIO (Celsius 36 - Blackout edition) has 3 fans, but they are all connected together in a daisy chain (that's by design on the Fractal Design AIO).The 3 AIO fans and the pump itself are all connected to the CPU_FAN header in the board (see Additionally, I have 6 Noctua fans connected to a Thermaltake FP Hub (10 PWM hub), which the BIOS sees as "one fan" obviously. Sort by. As a result, I saw the 95C figure at rest - 106C at the load on the pci-e sensor. User account menu. To drive chassis fans, I generally use the external temperature sensor (you have two of them). Aorus Master X570 Temperature Sensor Location.

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They are labeled ECM Temp1 and Temp2 (check your manual) with the included wires attached, so you can position the probe in the exact location inside the case where you want to check for hotspots. There are no such temperatures in the bios. … Aorus Master X570 Temperature Sensor Location. I cannot find much info on the manual or the gigabyte website, but I may be looking in the wrong place.But it doesn't say much. 2.