Raptor Computing Systems Community Forums (BETA)

Raptor Computing Systems Hardware => Talos II => Topic started by: DKnoto on September 28, 2022, 07:55:05 am

Title: Temperatures and rotational speed of fans
Post by: DKnoto on September 28, 2022, 07:55:05 am
I have a bit of a weird situation with the temperature and speed of the fans in my Talos II:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/iyzo0dllnmclwtx/Talos-II-Sensors-2022-09-28.png?dl=0

Should the control system not increase the speed to lower the temperature on this one sensor?
Title: Re: Temperatures and rotational speed of fans
Post by: ejfluhr on October 07, 2022, 12:59:25 pm
The processor OCC firmware can call for fan speed increases if on-die Tj rise.

Where does that "Temperature Pcie" come from?   Presuming it is from PCIe card(s), it would seem sensible that the BMC should monitor and adjust accordingly.   Hard to imagine there is such a glaring bug in the BMC firmware, but worse has happened I guess.

Maybe Fan5 is supposed to cool the PCIe cards, but isn't working?

Title: Re: Temperatures and rotational speed of fans
Post by: DKnoto on October 08, 2022, 05:23:40 am
At the moment I have 5 140 mm NOCTUA NF-A14 PWM fans. Three do the blowing
from the front, and 2 do the exhaust behind and above the CPU. The 2 fans from the
front I have connected to one slot.

"Pcie temperature" may be related to SSD temperature:

Code: [Select]
# smartctl -a /dev/nvme0 | grep Temp
Warning  Comp. Temp. Threshold:     82 Celsius
Critical Comp. Temp. Threshold:     85 Celsius
Temperature:                        45 Celsius
Warning  Comp. Temperature Time:    0
Critical Comp. Temperature Time:    0
Temperature Sensor 1:               45 Celsius
Temperature Sensor 2:               51 Celsius
Title: Re: Temperatures and rotational speed of fans
Post by: vikings.thum on October 11, 2022, 06:22:30 am
You could check the allowed operating temperatures for your device with the manufacturer. For all PCIe adapters I can think of setting a warning temperature of 45 degrees doesn't seem to be useful.
Many NVMes have an operating temp of up to 70 degrees. While I wouldn't want to operate at the maximum I wouldn't worry about having 50 degrees. If I would, I would add a heat sink and/or improve the air flow situation.