What motherboard is it, btw? Also, what I was asking was which other temps were being read.
@Blouge
Not everyone has the AUX 127 chip. I know I don't...
This may just be a pointer just pointing off into space on the ISA bus. The number 127 is significant, as it is one away from being the decimal representation of the last one of an 8 bit number. Since things in computers are generally numbered 0-whatever, the number 127 could possibly be the last allocatable "thing" (for lack of a better word) on this interface. For some (as yet) unexplained reason, the program is picking up this thing and "reading" it, showing the temperature being the highest temperature (I suspect) speedfan can represent, 127 degrees (0 to +/-127 degrees, either scale). Perhaps if you switch the readouts to using Celsius and the "temperature" stays the same, you can attribute it to a hardware malfunction/program bug, and disable it from being shown in your view.
Just a thought...