One CPU Core Temperature Too High

Sep 5, 2018
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I have new PC 2 month ago, i playing games on high graphic just fine till now.
Now my PC always restarting whenever i play game or not, even in idle.. i try to remove the gpu so atleast i can work, but its still restarting. so i think its not the gpu, then i try to change the psu but nothing happen still restarting, then i noticed one of my cpu core temp went too high. the rest was 48~54C but 1 core is almost 100C. so i change my stock cooler to new one and reapply the thermal paste. but one of the cpu core still went to over 90C but the rest become lower like 30~35.
so i think its the CPU sensor no ? then what should i do now ?

The CPU Temp :
jLKfryO.jpg


My PC Spec :
Asrock B360 Pro 4
Intel i5 8400
Cryorig M9i
Gigabyte 1080 G1
BitFenix Whisper M 650W

Any answer will be appreciated.
tbh i want to turn off the auto restart overheating, but i dont know how.
Thank you~
 
Solution
I would go for RMA of CPU, since it would be quite of explaining.
But if you wanna, Give it a go,
For me its under Advanced,
Then Advanced CPU configuration,
then should be saying "Active processor cores", select 2 if you can.

Then report back with screenshot again of Thermals,
NOTE: You will not see 6 of them as you posted up (the temperature#1 etc.) you will see just 2 of them, because you disabled the other 4 cores.

Well on rare occasion, maybe the thermal paste of the CPU (between Cores and IHS, the IHS is where you see the model number and speed physically of your CPU, the shiny metal) went bad?
Sep 5, 2018
2
0
10


how do i disable the cpu ? im sorry im new to this
 
I would go for RMA of CPU, since it would be quite of explaining.
But if you wanna, Give it a go,
For me its under Advanced,
Then Advanced CPU configuration,
then should be saying "Active processor cores", select 2 if you can.

Then report back with screenshot again of Thermals,
NOTE: You will not see 6 of them as you posted up (the temperature#1 etc.) you will see just 2 of them, because you disabled the other 4 cores.

Well on rare occasion, maybe the thermal paste of the CPU (between Cores and IHS, the IHS is where you see the model number and speed physically of your CPU, the shiny metal) went bad?
 
Solution