by congo » Sun Nov 07, 2004 10:57 pm
There really isn't a "normal" temperature, it depends on each systems case cooling, the ambient air temperature, the type of heatsink, CPU usage and peripherals. (Other components generate heat and warm the CPU's environment)
However, there are abnormally high temps. Over 55*C I would start looking at a cooling solution. In hot weather, if the PC is not in an air conditioned room, consider removing the side cover or using a high volume case fan.
Leaving the system on constantly may cause high temps as the entire metal mass of the PC as a whole will heat up like a big heatsink, only dissipating what heat it can through radiation or the usual inadequate case fans.
Many people seem to think that stopping and starting some components (particularly monitors) will reduce their lifespan. Well, it's probably going to be time for a new monitor anyway by then in my opinion.
It's my opinion that leaving a PC on constantly is just a waste of power and extra wear and tear on the system, especially if their are any moving parts operating.
Leaving a PC hooked up to the internet is also a virus/attack risk.
In my experience, systems get screwed up after a few hours of operation anyway, and need rebooting, which is probably soley due to operating system and software glitches. RAM fragmentation still seems to occur even with the latest WinXP op sys.
Saying that, there are a lot of PC's out there that run constantly, but I doubt many high end gaming machines would do that successfully.

Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24&