[SOLVED] cpu temperature different in HWmonitor and Ryzen master

Sep 28, 2020
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my CPU temperature is different in both the applications.
In HWmonitor it shows 56 degrees ( it is the temperature of package(node0) under temperatures tab).
while in ryzen master it shows 45 degrees and some times it also shows the difference of 20 degrees
so which temperature should I believe the hwmonitor or RM?
CPU - Ryzen 5 3600
Cooler - Corsair H45
 
Solution
my CPU temperature is different in both the applications.
In HWmonitor it shows 56 degrees ( it is the temperature of package(node0) under temperatures tab).
while in ryzen master it shows 45 degrees and some times it also shows the difference of 20 degrees
so which temperature should I believe the hwmonitor or RM?
CPU - Ryzen 5 3600
Cooler - Corsair H45
HWMonitor is showing the spike temperature readings whenever the CPU boosts. Ryzenmaster reports an 'average' temperature that levels off the thermal effect of the spikes. That's the more accurate thermal condition of the CPU.

One utility has both so you can compare them: HWInfo64. It's very useful when you create a graph on the desktop to show how they compare across time as...
my CPU temperature is different in both the applications.
In HWmonitor it shows 56 degrees ( it is the temperature of package(node0) under temperatures tab).
while in ryzen master it shows 45 degrees and some times it also shows the difference of 20 degrees
so which temperature should I believe the hwmonitor or RM?
CPU - Ryzen 5 3600
Cooler - Corsair H45
HWMonitor is showing the spike temperature readings whenever the CPU boosts. Ryzenmaster reports an 'average' temperature that levels off the thermal effect of the spikes. That's the more accurate thermal condition of the CPU.

One utility has both so you can compare them: HWInfo64. It's very useful when you create a graph on the desktop to show how they compare across time as you use the system.
 
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Solution
HWMonitor is showing the spike temperature readings whenever the CPU boosts. Ryzenmaster reports an 'average' temperature that levels off the thermal effect of the spikes. That's the more accurate thermal condition of the CPU.

One utility has both so you can compare them: HWInfo64. It's very useful when you create a graph on the desktop to show how they compare across time as you use the system.
thanks for the help i will download it
 

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