

CPU IA Cores: Maximum temperature among all computing (x86) cores in CPU (so part of CPU except Uncore and Graphics logic). Because of this limitation of AMD CPUs Argus Monitor only. Core #n (n=any number): Actual temperature of a particular CPU core. Temperature monitoring on current AMD processors differs from that on Intel CPUs in some ways. CPU Package (TSI): Available on pre-Zen AMD CPUs is the CPU temperature obtained via TSI interface. The air coming out the exhaust fan will feel almost like a hair dryer. If your core temp is over 80c, it will feel noticeably hot.

My f圆300 typically reads under 10c idle temp. CPU Package: Shown on Intel CPUs represents a 256-millisecond average value (calculated by CPU) of the hottest temperature sensor within the CPU package. AMD is notorious for displaying wrong temps.
#AMD TEMP MONITOR FULL#
CPU (Tdie): This value is shown in case the CPU uses an offset from Tctl and represents the real temperature (Tdie = Tctl - Tctl_offset). If you venture out on your own and pick up an 'entry level cooler'one with a TDP rating that is about the same as your CPUyou could see temps of around 80-95C at full load. If no offset is used, then only a single value is shown as Tctl/Tdie, which equals the real temperature. Offset is used mostly on X-series and some Threadripper CPUs in such case two values are shown: Tctl and Tdie. On AMD Zen series this is the temperature used to control cooling and is a fixed offset from the real CPU temperature. On several generations before Zen (Ryzen), this is not a reliable representation of the temperature. CPU (Tctl): This is the T_control temperature available on AMD CPUs only. Core Max: The maximum temperature among all cores in the CPU. CPU (onboard sensor): This is either a temperature measured by a dedicated sensor on mainboard located inside the CPU socket (the external CPU temperature) or temperature obtained from internal CPU thermal sensor (i.e.
