Guides & Troubleshooting

Step-by-step help for installing, reading sensors, exporting data, and reporting issues.

Guides Index

Installation Uninstall CPU temps TMPIN GPU temp & power S.M.A.R.T. Export logs Report bugs Common problems Best practices Antivirus

Guide cards

Installation

Installer vs Portable, step-by-step.

CPU package vs core

What to watch under load.

TMPIN sensors

Map using motherboard docs.

GPU temp & power

Afterburner comparison; PCIe + connectors.

Export logs

TXT and CSV logging.

Antivirus checklist

Safe download practices.

Installation (Installer vs Portable)

Installer (Setup)

  1. Download the setup executable from the official CPUID site or a reputable mirror.
  2. Run the installer and follow the on-screen prompts.
  3. Choose install location if offered; finish the wizard.
  4. Launch HWMonitor from the Start Menu or desktop shortcut.

Portable (ZIP)

  1. Download the ZIP from the official site.
  2. Extract the archive to a folder (e.g. on your PC or a USB drive).
  3. Run the HWMonitor executable inside the folder. No installation step required.
Common mistakes: Running a repacked or unofficial installer; not checking the digital signature or source.
Pro tip: Use Portable if you want to run from USB or avoid registry entries.

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Uninstall Steps

  1. For the setup (installer) version: Open Windows SettingsAppsApps & features (or Add or Remove Programs), find HWMonitor, and choose Uninstall. Or use Start MenuCPUIDHWMonitorUninstall HWMonitor if present.
  2. For the portable ZIP version: Delete the folder where you extracted the files. No uninstaller.
Common mistakes: Looking for an uninstaller for the portable version (there isn’t one—just delete the folder).

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Reading CPU Temperatures (Core vs Package)

Interpreting CPU package vs core temps and what to watch under load:

  1. HWMonitor shows per-core temperatures and a package temperature. The package usually represents the hottest spot (or an aggregate) on the CPU.
  2. For stress testing and stability, watch the highest value—often the package or the hottest core.
  3. Many modern CPUs tolerate high temps under load; sustained 90–95°C is often near the upper bound. Always follow your CPU vendor’s guidance.
Common mistakes: Focusing only on motherboard/socket readings instead of package or hottest core.
Pro tip: Use the min/max columns to see spikes during a stress test.

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Understanding TMPIN Sensors

How to map TMPIN using motherboard docs and sanity checks:

  1. TMPIN (e.g. TMPIN1, TMPIN2) are motherboard temperature sensors. Their exact purpose varies by manufacturer (VRMs, CPU socket area, chipset, etc.).
  2. Naming is not standardized. Check your motherboard manual or manufacturer documentation to map each TMPIN to a physical sensor.
  3. Use HWMonitor’s min/max to see if a reading changes under load—that can help confirm which component it might be.
Common mistakes: Assuming TMPIN1 is always “CPU” or “chipset” without checking your board’s docs.
Pro tip: Manufacturer forums or PDF manuals often list sensor names for your model.

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GPU Temperature and Power Readings

GPU temp differences vs MSI Afterburner

GPU temperature in HWMonitor is generally accurate. Small differences from MSI Afterburner and other tools can occur due to different sampling or which sensor is displayed. When to cross-check: if you need exact numbers for overclocking or thermal analysis, compare with a second tool.

GPU power readings (PCIe slot + connectors; estimating total draw)

  1. GPU power is shown when the hardware supports it. Values may be split by PCIe slot and auxiliary power connectors (6-pin or 8-pin).
  2. Add PCIe + connector values together to estimate total GPU power draw. Useful for PSU sizing or upgrade planning.
Common mistakes: Expecting power readouts on GPUs that don’t expose them; comparing a single sensor to a different sensor in another app.
Pro tip: Under load, compare HWMonitor’s GPU temp with Afterburner once to confirm they’re in the same ballpark.

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Drive S.M.A.R.T. Temperature and What It Means

  1. HWMonitor reads drive temperatures via S.M.A.R.T. The value is reported by the drive itself.
  2. Normal range varies by drive type; check the drive’s specs. Consistently high values (e.g. above 50–60°C for many SSDs) may warrant better airflow.
Pro tip: Use min/max to see peak drive temps during long transfers or benchmarks.

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Exporting Logs (TXT and CSV)

  1. TXT report: Use File → Save to generate a full text report of current sensor values. Useful for support and troubleshooting.
  2. Copy: Copy readings to the clipboard from the interface for pasting elsewhere.
  3. CSV logging: HWMonitor 1.62 adds CSV logging. Use it to record sensor data over time for analysis (e.g. in a spreadsheet). Check the application menu or options for enabling and configuring CSV log output.
Pro tip: Save a TXT report before contacting support (File → Save) and attach it when reporting bugs.

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Reporting Sensor Bugs

  1. In HWMonitor, go to File → Save to generate a complete report as a text file.
  2. Email that file to CPUID support. Use the address format: cpuz[at]cpuid.com (replace [at] with @).
Common mistakes: Sending a screenshot only; CPUID needs the full report file.

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Common Problems

See also Advanced permissions on the Features page.

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Best Practices

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Antivirus Warnings

Hardware monitoring software often triggers heuristic detections because it reads low-level system data. HWMonitor is not malware. To stay safe:

See Download and Trust & Security for more. If you need a Process Hacker alternative or a system monitor for processes, note that HWMonitor is for hardware sensors only.

Checklist: Download from official/reputable source only ✓ Verify signature or hash if provided ✓ Optional multi-engine scan (e.g. VirusTotal) ✓ Avoid repacks and unknown sources ✓

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Next steps

More answers in the FAQ, or verify safety on Trust & Security.