[SOLVED] TMPIN 2 at 80C while rendering

Mar 3, 2022
28
1
35
hi people .
i recently bought a a new pc
the system is
MB : MSI H510M-PRO
RAM : ADATA 3200 8gx2
CPU : Intel I5 , 11400
GPU : Asus GTX 1650 (4g) GDDR6
Cooling : Green Notus 95
PSU : GP600A-GED ( Green 600W Bronze)

My system doesn't have a good air flow and iam saving to buy a new case , and beside this iam monitoring my system TEMP via HWMonitor , and iam getting these temp while rendering a video via Camtasia , and i don't know why TEMPIN 2 is so high ! ? would you please tell me what is TEMPIN 2 and why it is so high ?

System temp while rendering
System temp while Idle

i don't understand computer components alot a noobie :D
 
Last edited:
Solution
mos = mosfet. its part of your VRM

https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/vrm-voltage-regulator-module-definition,5771.html
power delivery, hence why it gets warm. might not have a heatsink on it.

its probably okay at that temp, many of those parts can go up to 100 or more. But its not ideal to always be up there.

I'm going to use the I5 10400f+RX 6600 Eagle 8G and I was considering MSI H510M-A Pro as the motherboard. But after some research, I came across the opinion that this budget mobo has a hot VRM

Colif

Win 11 Master
Moderator
there isn't a lot out there on even where the sensors are on the motherboard. It might be under the CPU itself. Its tied to CPU in some way as its always above its temp. MSI don't even show the info in the manuals for their Z boards (its common for the Z boards to have more info than say what a H board has in manual)

I think tmpin2 is just what program labels it, not exactly helpful.

have you tried HWINFO as it might have more info on sensors in it - https://www.hwinfo.com/download/

Do MSI have software for board? Its not best idea but it might show where sensors are.
 
Last edited:
Mar 3, 2022
28
1
35
there isn't a lot out there on even where the sensors are on the motherboard. It might be under the CPU itself. Its tied to CPU in some way as its always above its temp. MSI don't even show the info in the manuals for their Z boards (its common for the Z boards to have more info than say what a H board has in manual)

I think tmpin2 is just what program labels it, not exactly helpful.

have you tried HWINFO as it might have more info on sensors in it - https://www.hwinfo.com/download/

Do MSI have software for board? Its not best idea but it might show where sensors are.
thanks for answering , i check it with HWINFO
and it seems that the TEMP is for MOS.

HWINFO CPU
HWINFO MOBO

Edit : as far as i know MSI has a afterburner that is for GPU .
 

Colif

Win 11 Master
Moderator
mos = mosfet. its part of your VRM

https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/vrm-voltage-regulator-module-definition,5771.html
power delivery, hence why it gets warm. might not have a heatsink on it.

its probably okay at that temp, many of those parts can go up to 100 or more. But its not ideal to always be up there.

I'm going to use the I5 10400f+RX 6600 Eagle 8G and I was considering MSI H510M-A Pro as the motherboard. But after some research, I came across the opinion that this budget mobo has a hot VRM
 
Last edited:
Solution
Mar 3, 2022
28
1
35
mos = mosfet. its part of your VRM

https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/vrm-voltage-regulator-module-definition,5771.html
power delivery, hence why it gets warm. might not have a heatsink on it.

its probably okay at that temp, many of those parts can go up to 100 or more. But its not ideal to always be up there.


thanks alot , i checked on google and seems that something between 80c - 100c is ok , and we are safe , is there anything i can do besides changing my case to cool it down ?
 

Colif

Win 11 Master
Moderator
depends what case you have now. More air flow will help. Its about only thing you can do.

the air coming from CPU air cooler will at least blow past it and maybe exit back of case. If you have an exhaust fan that helps, front fans also help a litte. It depends what case is like really.

I don't know what my underload temps are but my vrm sits on 43c most days. PC doesn't get a work out very often
 
Mar 3, 2022
28
1
35
depends what case you have now. More air flow will help. Its about only thing you can do.

the air coming from CPU air cooler will at least blow past it and maybe exit back of case. If you have an exhaust fan that helps, front fans also help a litte. It depends what case is like really.

I don't know what my underload temps are but my vrm sits on 43c most days. PC doesn't get a work out very often
thanks man , right now i have a really old case with a classic small fan at the back , and iam planning to buy this , thanks a lot for your help
 

TRENDING THREADS