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Just interested if anyone has seen similar or what else I can try: I have an ebay r730xd that I'm migrating my current setup into. The CPU temp between CPU1 and CPU2 is consistently different, on early boot maybe only 4C difference but usually 7-10C different and trending higher depending on system load. I've seen this behavior using Ubuntu and Unraid as the OS (Unraid is the permanent OS, Ubuntu was for early testing). I've tried the following to isolate the issue:

  1. Swapped CPUs between sockets.
  2. Swapped coolers between sockets.
  3. Repeated reapplications of thermal paste on both CPUs.
  4. Inspected and juggled fans around.
  5. Inspected for any blockages in airflow.

In all tests there was no improvement: CPU1 remained the hotter CPU and the temperate delta between the two CPUs didn't improve. At this point, I'm left thinking there is something wrong with the socket itself.

Has anyone seen this before and/or has any other ideas of what else to troubleshoot? I don't want to get a new motherboard if I don't have to but the temp of CPU1 triggers the fans to run too loud for apartment use but the temp of CPU2 would result in acceptable fan noise so I'll take any advice.

Thanks

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[-] merkuron@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

CPU1 handles almost everything about being a normal computer: booting, chipset, most of the I/O, etc. CPU2 is along for the ride and handles its own I/O lanes (PCIe) and whatever work the kernel wants to send to it. The load is not symmetrical, so if you have turbo enabled, CPU1 will be consistently boosting more than CPU2 as it is handling all of its tasks —> warmer CPU1. This is why “tandem” dual-CPU setups have CPU1 upstream in airflow from CPU2.

this post was submitted on 23 Nov 2023
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