I have an E210882 board that shuts down before I can access the bios fan on processor blowing 90mph.
Please provide more detail so we can decide if this is the appropriate forum for this type of question.
Hello Sergey,
By the nature of 'catastrophic shutdown', I'm guessing that the choice is: 1) give the OS time to do an orderly shutdown or 2) fry the chip.
The OS gets info before the catastrophic level so that the OS can try to cool down the chip (such as by throttling the frequency).
Here is a termperature FAQ http://www.intel.com/support/processors/sb/CS-033342.htm
For each processor there is a "Thermal and Mechanical Design Guide" guide like http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/design-guides/3rd-gen-core-lga1155-socke... which goes into some detail about all the thermal safeguard layers present in the chip.
Pat
Hello Sergey,
By the nature of 'catastrophic shutdown', I'm guessing that the choice is: 1) give the OS time to do an orderly shutdown or 2) fry the chip.
The OS gets info before the catastrophic level so that the OS can try to cool down the chip (such as by throttling the frequency).
Here is a termperature FAQ http://www.intel.com/support/processors/sb/CS-033342.htm
For each processor there is a "Thermal and Mechanical Design Guide" guide like http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/design-guides/3rd-gen-core-lga1155-socke... which goes into some detail about all the thermal safeguard layers present in the chip.
Pat
Pat can hardware overheat protection override the software(OS or acpi bios) in case of handling catastrophic shutdown? I mean what can happen when for example OS code which is trying to lower cpu frequency crashes or is unresponsive.
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