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Squeak825

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Sep 5, 2007
439
307
Brand new machine, installed a new 256 SSD in it (Fusion drive). Seeing CPU temps of 60 deg Celsisus.

What do other people see? Is that in the right range?
 

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GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,543
943
Brand new machine, installed a new 256 SSD in it (Fusion drive). Seeing CPU temps of 60 deg Celsisus.
That's quite normal. The Intel processors used in Macs are designed to automatically shut down to prevent damage if they truly overheat. CPU Tjmax = 105C (221F), GPU Tjmax = 100C (212F) on i3, i5, i7 processors. (Source: Intel)

If you're not already using it, iStat Pro (free) or iStat Menus ($16) will give you accurate readings of your temps and fan speeds, among other things.

Unless there is a rare defect in a Mac, most temps are well within the normal operating range, considering the workload being put on it. Websites with Flash content, games and other multimedia apps will put higher demand on the CPU/GPU, generating more heat. This is normal. If you're constantly putting high demands on your system, such as gaming or other multimedia tasks, expect temps to rise and fans to spin up accordingly. It's just your Mac doing its job to maintain temps within the normal range.

It is also quite normal for your Mac to become extremely hot to the touch during intensive operations. The aluminum body transfers heat more effectively than other materials used in computer casings, so you will feel the heat more. This doesn't indicate that it's overheating and will not harm the computer to be hot to the touch.

Your fans are always on when your Mac is on, spinning at a minimum of 2000 rpm (for MBPs) or 1800 rpm (for MBAs, MBs and minis). iMacs have 3 fans with minimum speeds in the 800-1200 range. They will spin faster as needed to keep temps at a safe level.

If your fans are spinning up without increased heat, try resetting the SMC.
(PRAM/NVRAM has nothing to do with these issues, so resetting it will not help.)

The intake and exhaust vents are in the back of the computer near the hinge on all Mac notebooks (except the new MBP with retina display, which has intake vents along the sides at the bottom). The iMac vent is a slot on the back near the top of the computer. Make sure the vents remain unblocked to allow your computer to perform at its best.

Learn about the fans in your Mac
Apple Portables: Operating temperature

For Flash-related issues:
 

propower

macrumors 6502a
Jul 23, 2010
731
126
When you put a 10% or more load on it you will see 80degC to 95degC.

Search temp, temperature, heat mini 2012...

Well documented what is normal
 

philipma1957

macrumors 603
Apr 13, 2010
6,364
249
Howell, New Jersey
When you put a 10% or more load on it you will see 80degC to 95degC.

Search temp, temperature, heat mini 2012...

Well documented what is normal

well more like a 30 percent load not 10 percent. the real issue is the quad core.


I have a dual and I like it. It is very difficult to get temps of 90f on the dual core base model. I just set prime95 on half the cores of my dual core. temps are 164 f or 73 c and the fans did not even ramp up they are at 1800 rpm. so the dual does not run very hot.
 

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calvol

macrumors 6502a
Feb 3, 2011
995
4
Before I returned it, my Mini 2.6 i7 would fairly rapidly get up to 103C when running Cinebench. Under idle, I believe it was in the 40-50C range.
 
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