Hi Alex, Thanks for the info. Unfortunately, the readings I get from sensors after those commands is nowhere even close to what some of the voltages should be. Core voltages are showing 4.08v and should be 1.3v. Lots of the others are way out as well, and temps are off, but higher than the actual hardware monitors in the bios show. I guess that is where all the different lines come into play in the sensors.conf file. There are just too many options to try to figure out which chip is doing what, especially with 3 or 4 different chips on the motherboard. I would have thought that some of the major mobo manufacturers would have written some kind of hardware monitor for linux, but guess not. Looks like I'll just have to dig into the /etc/sensors.conf and try to find the chip that works best, then set the highs and lows. Trouble with that is with the readings that are shown, nothing will be in spec. Any more suggestions before I screw things up ? :-) Sam Alexandru E. Ungur wrote: >> >Sure: > >up2date lm_sensors >sensors-detect >lots of Enter... >... >chkconfig --level 2345 lm_sensors on >service lm_sensors start >sensors > >That works for me, probably it should work for you too. > >A good day to everyone, >Alex >_______________________________________________ >CentOS mailing list >CentOS at centos.org >http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > > > -- Snowman