> > > M/B and CPU temp are swapped. CPU is 39 and MB 28 > > > > I doubt it. It would be physically difficult to do this, unless the > > monitoring chip is hardly tied to the CPU. This was never seen. > > temp1(here displayed as "M/B Temp") is the monitoring chipset > > internal temperature. 39 degrees is exactly what I have for a > > similar chip here. > > No, the BIOS shows the temperatures *exactly* swapped Strange. I'd be tempted to affirm that your BIOS is wrong. Please run some CPU-intensive task (kernel compilation, cpuburn, whatever) and see which temperature is raising. This is CPU temp. BTW, which motherboard is that? The more I learn about Asus, the more I think they are the worst brand when it comes to hardware monitoring. Not releasing data sheets is a first thing, using the chipsets in a completely wrong way is another. My next motherboard won't be an Asus. > Also, fan1 is wrong. I use a thermaltake silent boost, it never > reaches 3000 RPM I'm clueless. What does the BIOS say about it? > I'm not using a configuration file (2.6 kernel if that matters) I seriously doubt it. You wouldn't have labels such as "M/B Temp". Take a look, you probably have some (possibly old) /etc/sensors.conf file (or wherever that is on your system). If you don't believe me, try "sensors -c /dev/null" and you'll see what it really looks like without a configuration file. -- Jean Delvare http://www.ensicaen.ismra.fr/~delvare/