Hi Soar,
an interesting question and one that gets asked quite a bit.
If you check the Block Diagram in your User's Manual you can see that the Northbridge is responsible for handling communication between several main components of the PC. These include the CPU, RAM, Graphics and some of the PCIe Bus lanes and on some motherboards extra SATA ports.
The more work these components do the hotter the Northbridge will be. For example, running two graphic cards in SLI or Crossfire will increase the throughput on the Northbridge and the temperature will rise accordingly. I recently had a crossfire configuration on my system and saw the Northbridge temp drop by around 15C by removing one of the cards. Overclocking the CPU, having a higher speed CPU or running faster RAM will also produce more heat from the Northbridge. Again, on my AMD system running a low end Sempron will give me about 5-10C drop in Northbridge temps over the 1090T running flat out.
Play a game such as Crysis or watch a video and keep an eye on the Northbridge temps whilst doing so and you will see it rise. This is due to the demands of the video information being passed through the system and, in particular the Northbridge.
Hope this helps your understanding of this particular part of the PC a little better.
Absic,
You did it again! My goodness, what a clear explanation you give. To be 100% honest with you, I had no clue whatsoever what exactly the Northbridge does or why it is even on the motherboard. Thanks to you, now I realize some of its functions as well as why it can become a little hotter than other components.
Absic, I will soon need to purchase a new hat because I have worn it out tipping it so many times to you!
Well, while you are here, can you give any insights into whether or not the GIGABYTE GA-990FXA-UD3 AM3+ AMD 990FX SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX AMD Motherboard is very effective at unlocking a 4th core on the AMD Phenom II X3 720 Black Edition Heka 2.8GHz Socket AM3 95W Triple-Core Processor?
I recently found a great deal on this AMD triple core processor and I was curious if the GIGABYTE GA-990FXA-UD3 AM3+ AMD 990FX SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX AMD Motherboard is able to accomplish such a feat.
I also recently found a great $50 deal on a new BIOSTAR A870U3 [I know....shhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...we don't mention that dirty name here]....but, the reviews on this motherboard state it is an excellent choice to use for unlocking 4th cores....
I know nothing whatsoever about this unlocking business, but for the price, I thought I would take the risk.
Any ideas how to proceed in this matter?
Soar