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I have bought a new fan for my PC and I want to try different configurations (air in/out) for the fans.

To measure the temperature I have AIDA64 Extreme, but the problem is that the values change easily and quickly, so using Print Screen to save the temperatures doesn't work very well.

Then, it would be great to have a program which draws the temperatures in a temperature/time graph.

Of course the program should measure CPU's temperature, but I would appreciate motherboard's and hard disks' one too.

Moreover, I have a DualCore AMD Athlon processor, and it seems that "there is only one temperature sensor per CPU (not one per core)" 1, but AIDA64 shows three temperatures (CPU, core1 and core 2). So it would be better a software designed to target AMD processors.

And it should be free. Am I asking too much?

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  • @BradPatton Thanks for the link, I had heard about SpeedFan but I didn't know that it monitors temperatures.
    – Oriol
    Feb 14, 2013 at 18:39

1 Answer 1

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You can use Speccy to view the CPU (per core), Hard Drive and Motherboard Temperatures over time. It also includes a whole bunch of other information and is free for personal use. To get a graph go to the section you want and click on the little green grid by the temperature. Happy Graphing!

enter image description here enter image description here

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  • I am trying free version bot not seeing graphs anywhere. Is graph not there in free version?
    – abhinav
    Apr 1, 2016 at 3:52
  • As David said, click the green icons to show charts.
    – Deebster
    May 16, 2016 at 17:03
  • 2
    The graphs would be a lot more helpful if they labeled the axes. Jan 2, 2017 at 1:25
  • OMG there is no scales in this graph! That stinks.
    – Pedro77
    Jun 5, 2018 at 2:05
  • It's missing time labels on the X scale :(
    – ViktorMS
    Nov 21, 2020 at 10:10

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