what is normal operating temp for T60p
what is normal operating temp for T60p
First rule is pick a common tool so we are all using the same metric. I am going to use NHC which currently shows a CPU temperature of 47C and motherboard temperature of 47C. Everest shows the same values (its also using ACPI for CPU and motherboard temps), but it also shows core temperatures from the Intel on-board die sensors of 44C and 47C respectively. Core temps are actually better measure because they are most consistent across hardware lines but the calculations are unfortunately different for each software tool, and since we are just looking at T6x the ACPI should be the most consistent.
This laptop is using the on-demand power management scheme, and has the low-power BIOS options enabled. It's mounted in one of the Advanced Docking Stations which gives it good airflow underneath. I am using BIOS fan control when taking this reading, and TPFanControl is NOT running and is NOT being used for temperature reading (the ACPI sources appear to be in error).
Sometimes when the computer resumes from standby the CPU and core temperatures will spike to ~60C and stay there, like the power management has lost its mind, but after a reboot it's back to the "normal" temps listed above. See this graph for more information.
I would like to get this down to lower 30s but I'm not sure if it's possible due to the compact design. FWIW my workstation rig has idle core temperatures of ~18C
This laptop is using the on-demand power management scheme, and has the low-power BIOS options enabled. It's mounted in one of the Advanced Docking Stations which gives it good airflow underneath. I am using BIOS fan control when taking this reading, and TPFanControl is NOT running and is NOT being used for temperature reading (the ACPI sources appear to be in error).
Sometimes when the computer resumes from standby the CPU and core temperatures will spike to ~60C and stay there, like the power management has lost its mind, but after a reboot it's back to the "normal" temps listed above. See this graph for more information.
I would like to get this down to lower 30s but I'm not sure if it's possible due to the compact design. FWIW my workstation rig has idle core temperatures of ~18C
-
NorrisCell
- Senior Member

- Posts: 882
- Joined: Mon Apr 30, 2007 3:41 pm
- Location: Las Vegas, NV
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
Right this moment, my CPU is idling at 49C. My normal is about 46-47, same as your machine. It's pretty F-ing hot in my apartment right now, which accounts for the slight difference. I use NHC on Dynamic Switching with no manual changes in the CPU voltage.
Anyone know if there is a reason for the higher temps after restoring from suspend? Mine also hovers around 58-59 at idle after I un-suspend it sometimes, which lasts until I reboot it
Anyone know if there is a reason for the higher temps after restoring from suspend? Mine also hovers around 58-59 at idle after I un-suspend it sometimes, which lasts until I reboot it
Cell phones are my specialty. Got questions? Ask away.
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
The T60p was notorious for high operating temps (CPU and GPU). Under load some peoples' temps are approaching 100oC!!! The cooling system was redesigned for the T61p - idle temps are lower now but full load temps are still pretty high. If your workstation is a desktop then you can't compare them. What are your temps on the T60p under load?
Keith
(Formerly 600E 2645, T30 2366, X31 2673, T40 2373, T41 2379, T42 2373, T42 2379, T60 1952, T61p 8889, T61p 8891
Currently T420 4177-CTO, T430 2347-A54, T430 2347-UN9, T430 2349-L64, T430 2342-CTO, H520S 2561-1LU, Ideapad K1)
(Formerly 600E 2645, T30 2366, X31 2673, T40 2373, T41 2379, T42 2373, T42 2379, T60 1952, T61p 8889, T61p 8891
Currently T420 4177-CTO, T430 2347-A54, T430 2347-UN9, T430 2349-L64, T430 2342-CTO, H520S 2561-1LU, Ideapad K1)
-
ajkula66
- SuperUserGeorge

- Posts: 15740
- Joined: Sun Feb 25, 2007 11:28 am
- Location: Brodheadsville, Pennsylvania
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
These temperatures are quite alright. Sorry, guys, but no machine with such a GPU will ever run really cool.
None of my workstation-class-ThinkPads (A31p-T43p-T60p-W500-Z60m, all 15/15.4 units) is ever allowed to go into standby. I just turn the LCD off when they're not in use, and have never seen the issue that is being referred to in this thread, although I don't doubt for a split second that it's very real.
My experiences only.
None of my workstation-class-ThinkPads (A31p-T43p-T60p-W500-Z60m, all 15/15.4 units) is ever allowed to go into standby. I just turn the LCD off when they're not in use, and have never seen the issue that is being referred to in this thread, although I don't doubt for a split second that it's very real.
My experiences only.
...Knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules...(King Crimson)
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
AARP club members:A31p, T43pSF
Abused daily: T61p
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
AARP club members:A31p, T43pSF
Abused daily: T61p
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
Does NHC work with Windows 7?
New:
Thinkpad T430s 8GB DDR3, 1600x900, 128GB + 250GB SSD's, etc.
Old:
E6520, Precision M4400, D630, Latitude E6520
ThinkPad Tablet 16GB 1838-22U
IBM Thinkpad X61T, T61, T43, X41T, T60, T41P, T42, T410, X301
Thinkpad T430s 8GB DDR3, 1600x900, 128GB + 250GB SSD's, etc.
Old:
E6520, Precision M4400, D630, Latitude E6520
ThinkPad Tablet 16GB 1838-22U
IBM Thinkpad X61T, T61, T43, X41T, T60, T41P, T42, T410, X301
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
Yes, with some minor issues. See this: http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?f=57&t=76480Does NHC work with Windows 7?
I used to be an anarchist but I quit because there were too many rules
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
In the past year, I have looked through every T60-temp thread on this forum, as I work to optimize my own T60p for heat and power.
But very few of the temp-report posts I've seen are useful for comparisons.
Why do I say this?
Because the posted reports fail to include any data about critical test conditions such as ambient-temp and most especially CPU-consumption-%.
A report of one's cpu-temp being at 50C, without also saying how hard the cpu was working at that time, is not very meaningful.
That's because a cpu-% difference of just 25% can make a cpu-temp difference of 20-30C ! ....a big difference indeed.
And 25% differences in cpu-consumption between posters' thinkpads are very common. The normal idle cpu-% for a clean XP installation will be in the 2-5% range; whereas a system with typical OS/service and autoruns bloat may be running the cpu at 20-30% even at so-called "idle"...
It should be obvious that the ongoing great debate between the "T60's run so hot at 70-80c" camp, and the "no, no, T60's only run at 50c" camp, is in large part due to exactly this difference.....the difference in 'idling' cpu-%.
Further, the measured cpu/gpu temps will quite closely follow changes in ambient-temp. An ambient rise of 10C will typically cause a directly proportional cpu-temp rise of 7-9C. Thus, a cpu-temp report which doesn't include a semi-accurate ambient-temp condition is also pretty useless for comparing between members' machines.
Finally, it's just as critical that the Fan conditions be stated with every measurement/report. The airflow of a centrifigual fan or pump varies as the cube of the rpm. That means that if you double the RPM, you get eight times the airflow. So even small changes of fan-speed make a big, big difference.
As a point of refernce, a fan-speed difference of only 500rpm, from 3000 to 3500 rpm, can drop cpu-temp by almost 10C.
In summary, I suggest and ask that all Temp-Reports posted here at TP-forums in the future include the following info, in order to make them much more useful to everyone from now on...
- CPU and GPU temp (but preferably the whole tpfc device-set)
- Ambient Temp at time of this measurement
- CPU% as shown in Task Manager at time of measurement!
- Fan conditions (off or on, and what rpm)
- Hardware disablings; i.e, if Wifi, LCD, or HD is shut off, report it
If we all structure our temp-reports in this way, then they'll be far more useful to all of us as we move forward.
Richard
Notes:
- The various softwares used to measure temps are prone to bugs. It's important that one cross-check with a different package and/or technique. If two packages aren't giving the same temp-reading within 1-2 degrees, then something's wrong with your software-setup, and that should definitely be part of your reports.
- RMclock is known to jump 10C after 'sleep' cycles. It appears to be 'losing' its cpu temp-sensor offset value. I.e., after a fresh boot, rmclock will agree almost exactly with tpfc. But after a sleep cycle, suddenly it's reading 5-6deg higher than tpfc. After more sleep cycles, it's up to 10deg higher than tpfc. Beware. This is why you should always use more than one 'instrument' to take experimental measurements....crosscheck.
- TPfancontrol is highly subject to user-setup errors in re editing the ini file. Screwing up an offset number, or a temp-sensor address, will produce temp-readout lists that are wildly off.
- Some tpfancontrol reports posted here have shown cpu/gpu temps in the 45C range while simultaneously showing battery temps of 50-55c !
Obviously, something's badly wrong there. Either the poster's tpfc setup is screwed up, or they were fast-charging their battery while taking temp-measurements (which produces 'outlier' reports that aren't valid comparisons for other members).
Batt-charging has the same effect on internal temps as a very hot ambient-temp does. Bottom-line: make sure your battery isn't charging, whenever you take temp measurements.
- As mentioned, CPU/GPU temps will track changes in ambient-temp fairly closely; meaning the temp of the air entering the fan; which air comes from inside the case. Thus, anything adding heat to the air as it flows through the case to the fan-inlet will cause a rise in your measured cpu/gpu temps (e.g., the battery-charging example above).
Running WWAN, Gigabit Enet, and any PC-Cards, has the exact same effect as batt-charging. The moral here is that the only useful temp-report is one that mentions ALL test conditions. And also, that the tests one does before/after a change (like adding Arctic Silver) must always use ALL the same conditions, or neither the tests nor the reports will be accurate or useful.
But very few of the temp-report posts I've seen are useful for comparisons.
Why do I say this?
Because the posted reports fail to include any data about critical test conditions such as ambient-temp and most especially CPU-consumption-%.
A report of one's cpu-temp being at 50C, without also saying how hard the cpu was working at that time, is not very meaningful.
That's because a cpu-% difference of just 25% can make a cpu-temp difference of 20-30C ! ....a big difference indeed.
And 25% differences in cpu-consumption between posters' thinkpads are very common. The normal idle cpu-% for a clean XP installation will be in the 2-5% range; whereas a system with typical OS/service and autoruns bloat may be running the cpu at 20-30% even at so-called "idle"...
It should be obvious that the ongoing great debate between the "T60's run so hot at 70-80c" camp, and the "no, no, T60's only run at 50c" camp, is in large part due to exactly this difference.....the difference in 'idling' cpu-%.
Further, the measured cpu/gpu temps will quite closely follow changes in ambient-temp. An ambient rise of 10C will typically cause a directly proportional cpu-temp rise of 7-9C. Thus, a cpu-temp report which doesn't include a semi-accurate ambient-temp condition is also pretty useless for comparing between members' machines.
Finally, it's just as critical that the Fan conditions be stated with every measurement/report. The airflow of a centrifigual fan or pump varies as the cube of the rpm. That means that if you double the RPM, you get eight times the airflow. So even small changes of fan-speed make a big, big difference.
As a point of refernce, a fan-speed difference of only 500rpm, from 3000 to 3500 rpm, can drop cpu-temp by almost 10C.
In summary, I suggest and ask that all Temp-Reports posted here at TP-forums in the future include the following info, in order to make them much more useful to everyone from now on...
- CPU and GPU temp (but preferably the whole tpfc device-set)
- Ambient Temp at time of this measurement
- CPU% as shown in Task Manager at time of measurement!
- Fan conditions (off or on, and what rpm)
- Hardware disablings; i.e, if Wifi, LCD, or HD is shut off, report it
If we all structure our temp-reports in this way, then they'll be far more useful to all of us as we move forward.
Richard
Notes:
- The various softwares used to measure temps are prone to bugs. It's important that one cross-check with a different package and/or technique. If two packages aren't giving the same temp-reading within 1-2 degrees, then something's wrong with your software-setup, and that should definitely be part of your reports.
- RMclock is known to jump 10C after 'sleep' cycles. It appears to be 'losing' its cpu temp-sensor offset value. I.e., after a fresh boot, rmclock will agree almost exactly with tpfc. But after a sleep cycle, suddenly it's reading 5-6deg higher than tpfc. After more sleep cycles, it's up to 10deg higher than tpfc. Beware. This is why you should always use more than one 'instrument' to take experimental measurements....crosscheck.
- TPfancontrol is highly subject to user-setup errors in re editing the ini file. Screwing up an offset number, or a temp-sensor address, will produce temp-readout lists that are wildly off.
- Some tpfancontrol reports posted here have shown cpu/gpu temps in the 45C range while simultaneously showing battery temps of 50-55c !
Batt-charging has the same effect on internal temps as a very hot ambient-temp does. Bottom-line: make sure your battery isn't charging, whenever you take temp measurements.
- As mentioned, CPU/GPU temps will track changes in ambient-temp fairly closely; meaning the temp of the air entering the fan; which air comes from inside the case. Thus, anything adding heat to the air as it flows through the case to the fan-inlet will cause a rise in your measured cpu/gpu temps (e.g., the battery-charging example above).
Running WWAN, Gigabit Enet, and any PC-Cards, has the exact same effect as batt-charging. The moral here is that the only useful temp-report is one that mentions ALL test conditions. And also, that the tests one does before/after a change (like adding Arctic Silver) must always use ALL the same conditions, or neither the tests nor the reports will be accurate or useful.
WANTED! - Battery Diags/Reset Software; please PM me!
WTB: Good 9-cell T60 batt
WTB: Frankenpad T60 15" UXGA w/T61-Intel & internal modem
T60p, 2623-ddu, uxga, Intel-GPU || T61, 6465-01U 15.4" sxga || R60 9457-W37 14"xga
WTB: Good 9-cell T60 batt
WTB: Frankenpad T60 15" UXGA w/T61-Intel & internal modem
T60p, 2623-ddu, uxga, Intel-GPU || T61, 6465-01U 15.4" sxga || R60 9457-W37 14"xga
-
wild_bill
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 211
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2009 6:05 am
- Location: Birmingham, Alabama, USA
- Contact:
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
Apparently my optimizations are first rate, because I am running Avira anti-virus, Yahoo IM, Firefox with 10 tabs open, Comodo firewall, Clipmate, Pawclock, Coretemp, and DUmeter, not only on startup, but all the time, and my CPU utilization is 0-1% whenever I check in taskmanager, perhaps I need to sell these 100 or so XP registry tweaks I wrote!The normal idle cpu-% for a clean XP installation will be in the 2-5% range; whereas a system with typical OS/service and autoruns bloat may be running the cpu at 20-30% even at so-called "idle"..
my T60 pretty much stays at 35°-39°C when using it in a 24°C room (75°F)
IBM T60 | 15'' BOE·hydis UXGA IPS | T7200 Core2Duo | 4GB CL4 | 320GB Fujitsu 7200 | Echo Indigo studio sound | NMB kb | XP Pro | Linux Mint | Win7 x64
~~~ celebrating my 37th year of working with micro computers - still have my original MITS Altair 8800 and LSI ADM-3 from '75 ~~~
~~~ celebrating my 37th year of working with micro computers - still have my original MITS Altair 8800 and LSI ADM-3 from '75 ~~~
Re: what is normal operating temp for T60p
perhaps so!wild_bill wrote: Apparently my optimizations are first rate, because I am running Avira anti-virus, Yahoo IM, Firefox with 10 tabs open, Comodo firewall, Clipmate, Pawclock, Coretemp, and DUmeter, not only on startup, but all the time, and my CPU utilization is 0-1% whenever I check in taskmanager,
perhaps I need to sell these 100 or so XP registry tweaks I wrote!![]()
.....
(75°F)
yes, that sounds like good optimization to me.
my T60p runs also runs at 0-1% when truly 'idling'...and about 2% avg while reading something while an mp3 is playing (1by1 player) and a download is going in the background (FDM/FFox). This is on win2k/sp4, although I'm getting the same results on XP in my wife's T61/intel, and our R60/intel 'connection server' running xp/ics 24/7 (at under 10 watts draw avg.
PS: even better than selling those jewels of optimization...POST THEM !
WANTED! - Battery Diags/Reset Software; please PM me!
WTB: Good 9-cell T60 batt
WTB: Frankenpad T60 15" UXGA w/T61-Intel & internal modem
T60p, 2623-ddu, uxga, Intel-GPU || T61, 6465-01U 15.4" sxga || R60 9457-W37 14"xga
WTB: Good 9-cell T60 batt
WTB: Frankenpad T60 15" UXGA w/T61-Intel & internal modem
T60p, 2623-ddu, uxga, Intel-GPU || T61, 6465-01U 15.4" sxga || R60 9457-W37 14"xga
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
-
IBM Thinkpad T42 windows 98 temp measuring and heatsink upgrade
by wasilii » Mon Apr 10, 2017 10:36 am » in ThinkPad T4x Series - 3 Replies
- 799 Views
-
Last post by shawross
Tue Apr 11, 2017 5:33 am
-
-
- 42 Replies
- 2744 Views
-
Last post by taichi
Thu Jan 12, 2017 11:44 am
-
-
What LCD options do I have for a 15" T60p these days?
by jcitme » Tue Jan 17, 2017 3:50 am » in ThinkPad T6x Series - 15 Replies
- 2012 Views
-
Last post by Troels
Fri Feb 10, 2017 4:56 pm
-
-
- 7 Replies
- 1020 Views
-
Last post by thinkpadcollection
Mon Feb 06, 2017 7:48 pm
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests





