Hello, I was about to buy a Joying head Unit, which I've been told suffers from excesive temperature (no heat sinks nor fans)...
I would like to monitor the unit -without modding it to avoid loosing warranty- but haven't figured out how to save both the temperature and the CPU load in a text file or spreadsheet.
People talk about HW MONITOR PRO, but it doesn't have any option to save the data in a spreadsheet.
How do you guys store the data to analyze it afterwards?
Thank you in advance.
Related
Hello guys!
This is my first time posting here, so if I'm breaking any rules please let me know
Anyway, I'm looking to get a new Android device and I'm think I'm going to get the new Sony Xperia Z. The only problem is that I can't get a real device to test it (for just like 30 minutes). Anyway, I've watched a bunch of reviews and read many articles so I good to go, except for one thing - I want to know how much the phone heats when it's running at 100%.
I've already seen some threads here on XDA, but they are mostly subjective (temperatures are mentioned as warm and hot). I would like to get more objective result. If you own a Xperia Z device, you can help me - it won't take too much of your time
Anyway, here is what I'm proposing as a more objective test:
1) Download and install StabilityTest i System Tuner. You can get them in the Play Store.
2) Close all running apps. Run System Tuner. Open Settings -> Recording preferences -> Items to record and check CPU frequency and CPU temperature.
3) Go to the main menu of the System Tuner app and click icon named "Start" (upper right corner). Now the app is logging the in CPU frequency and temperature. Click on CPU icon and not your current temperature.
4) Leave System Tuner running in the background and open StabilityTest. Click on the first button (Classic Stability test). Leave it running for at least 20 minutes.
5) After at least 20 minutes have passed, you can close StabilityTest and stop recording in the System Tuner. The log will be saved on you SD card in the folder pwm/recordings. Please attach it in you post
Please post your battery percentage before you have started StabilityTest and after you've closed it. Also, please post whether you did the test with you phone on or off the charger.
Thanks!
xx77aBs said:
Hello guys!
This is my first time posting here, so if I'm breaking any rules please let me know
Anyway, I'm looking to get a new Android device and I'm think I'm going to get the new Sony Xperia Z. The only problem is that I can't get a real device to test it (for just like 30 minutes). Anyway, I've watched a bunch of reviews and read many articles so I good to go, except for one thing - I want to know how much the phone heats when it's running at 100%.
I've already seen some threads here on XDA, but they are mostly subjective (temperatures are mentioned as warm and hot). I would like to get more objective result. If you own a Xperia Z device, you can help me - it won't take too much of your time
Anyway, here is what I'm proposing as a more objective test:
1) Download and install StabilityTest i System Tuner. You can get them in the Play Store.
2) Close all running apps. Run System Tuner. Open Settings -> Recording preferences -> Items to record and check CPU frequency and CPU temperature.
3) Go to the main menu of the System Tuner app and click icon named "Start" (upper right corner). Now the app is logging the in CPU frequency and temperature. Click on CPU icon and not your current temperature.
4) Leave System Tuner running in the background and open StabilityTest. Click on the first button (Classic Stability test). Leave it running for at least 20 minutes.
5) After at least 20 minutes have passed, you can close StabilityTest and stop recording in the System Tuner. The log will be saved on you SD card in the folder pwm/recordings. Please attach it in you post
Please post your battery percentage before you have started StabilityTest and after you've closed it. Also, please post whether you did the test with you phone on or off the charger.
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You don't need all this benchmarks because its common sense really. I have the device, on normal operations e.g. browsing, videos etc.. it doesn't get hot, but a bit warm near the rear camera. But, if you do intensive tasks e.g. playing a game e.g. nova 3 etc.. then it gets a bit more hot, but not so much to burn your hands. This is normal because think about the horse power this phone has in a slim form factor and all the heat that gets generated without any cooling fans. Its normal but its not normal if it goes beyond the range of operations, which in my case, I have not noticed. I had a Motorola Droid the keyboard version, that device got extremely hot and it was really uncomfortable to hold.
As a user, I am very pleased with this smartphone and ofcoz it has drawbacks then again no phone is perfect. Hope this helps what you looking for without benchmarks
Rchard said:
You don't need all this benchmarks because its common sense really. I have the device, on normal operations e.g. browsing, videos etc.. it doesn't get hot, but a bit warm near the rear camera. But, if you do intensive tasks e.g. playing a game e.g. nova 3 etc.. then it gets a bit more hot, but not so much to burn your hands. This is normal because think about the horse power this phone has in a slim form factor and all the heat that gets generated without any cooling fans. Its normal but its not normal if it goes beyond the range of operations, which in my case, I have not noticed. I had a Motorola Droid the keyboard version, that device got extremely hot and it was really uncomfortable to hold.
As a user, I am very pleased with this smartphone and ofcoz it has drawbacks then again no phone is perfect. Hope this helps what you looking for without benchmarks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Transitioning from a low end HTC Incredible S, I found it very unusual how the phone got warm by just going through the user interface.
then i ran qualcomm trepn profiler and it showed that my 1st cpu core was doing anything between 1ghz and 1.5ghz at any given time.
possibly fixed with a kernel tweak?
Rchard said:
You don't need all this benchmarks because its common sense really. I have the device, on normal operations e.g. browsing, videos etc.. it doesn't get hot, but a bit warm near the rear camera. But, if you do intensive tasks e.g. playing a game e.g. nova 3 etc.. then it gets a bit more hot, but not so much to burn your hands. This is normal because think about the horse power this phone has in a slim form factor and all the heat that gets generated without any cooling fans. Its normal but its not normal if it goes beyond the range of operations, which in my case, I have not noticed. I had a Motorola Droid the keyboard version, that device got extremely hot and it was really uncomfortable to hold.
As a user, I am very pleased with this smartphone and ofcoz it has drawbacks then again no phone is perfect. Hope this helps what you looking for without benchmarks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It should be common sense, but I've read about Xperia Z on many pages. And some users say that it only gets warm, others say it's hot when gaming and some say that it's running too hot. Maybe some of them do have defective units, so this test would be also great for comparison between units. Can you run the test? You don't even need to run it for 20 minutes, 10 should be enough. Or if you won't/can't do the test, can you at least just check in the System Tuner if Xperia Z has CPU temperature sensor - if it doesn't have one then I can stop searching for people who own it.
P.S. Can somebody say if Xperia Z is running hotter or colder than Samsung Galaxy S2?
Hello all
I've got an idea. Since I didn't find any kind of thread about this subject, I was thinking to create one where you all can share your temperatures and what are you doing or using when you measure your oneplus 5 temps.
You can install CPU-Z or Aida64. There are a lot of parameters but I think the most important is the battery and a sort of average of the others.
For instance, I'm using XDA app to write this post and have Instagram and Facebook messenger opened in background.
My temps are:
-> battery 31.8°
-> average of the rest: 36°/37°
After this moment I kept those apps opened and started to watch an Anime stream on kissanime with chrome.
->battery 34°
-> average of the rest 39°/40°
Have fun
And what is the point of this? BTW without ambient temperature all collected data are unusable.
I dont see the point either. Anything below 50°C is to be considered low anyway.
I understand your points.
The idea was to have something where people can share their temps a see if there is or not a possibility for their phone to overheating.
I might be a little apprehensive about my temps, sometimes I think that my phone is a little hotter than it should be.
However, if you think that this thread is bad, I kindly ask to somebody with permissions to delete it.
Ahh my ambient temperature when I measure those values was about 22°/23°
There are so many variables, that you can't say what is normal temperature and what temperature it should have. Do you hold it in your hand? You will get higher temp. Is sun shining on your phone? Higher temp. Do you often use camera? Higher temp.... Unless you encounter extremes, you can't decide what temperature is normal. If you think, that something is wrong, it's better to start with collecting better stats of battery consumption, because excesive heat is consequence of another problem.
Is there anything I can do on a new galaxy note 4 to prevent the emmc issue happening in the first place?
There was some talk about preventing overheating?
ghostwheel said:
There was some talk about preventing overheating?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do I need to lower the cpu ghz? Or run some kind of app or program?
Redrainz said:
Do I need to lower the cpu ghz? Or run some kind of app or program?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It might help to lower the CPU speed, but you need access to root and an app to tweak the values.
Avoid gaming which is very demanding on GPU and avoid gaming for long periods of time.
Search also in the Snapdragon forum a good kernel.
Also turn off the fast charging, this can heat too much the phone.
I created a script here. It works very good, it monitors the battery temperature AND all the CPU cores temperatures, and will automatically throttle the phone if temps are too high. You can even kill some apps if the temps are to high (not yet implemented).
The difference with Samsung DVFS or integrated temperature management of kernels is that this one monitors almost all CPU sensors and also the battery, all in complete combination, and it can be easily tweaked (rather than modding a kernel). No battery hog. You can enable USB fast charge, game, etc it will still prevent overheating.
Here is the solution to eMMC error
Hello everyone, I was pretty tired of the eMMC error, and I created a script that completely annihilate this error. This error is due to the phone heating up, and the fact that custom kernels (maybe even the original kernel) don't read the...
forum.xda-developers.com
First of all, I'm not gaming in this phone.
Here are apps I use:
XPlayer
IDM
Reddit
CPU Monitor
Network Speed
I'm using Pixel Experience Rom Android 11
According to CPU Monitor app, my cpu is always around 58-65 celsius and it sometimes shoots up to 75-80 celsius. I live in tropical country and this phone is notorius for heating. I already opened up the back for battery replacement so I have experienced opening this phone.
Any tips to not let cpu overheat? Whether on software or hardware side?
Edit: I'm asking about managing CPU temp (not battery temp)
Hi
Is it possible that Tasker can monitor when the hot water comes to a certain temperature?
If you're not familiar with the NIBE heat pumps they allow you to control the system remotely via an app. Here you can see the status of the hot water temperature and if I can somehow get Tasker to watch this figure and when it hits 52c it will notify me on my Google speaker.
James