How to Use System Information Viewer (SIV) for Windows Diagnostics
System Information Viewer (SIV) is a lightweight diagnostic tool for Windows that gathers and displays detailed hardware and system information in a single interface. This guide shows how to install SIV, navigate its main features, run common diagnostics, interpret key data, and export reports for troubleshooting.
1. Install and launch SIV
- Download the latest SIV build from the official developer page (choose the portable ZIP or installer).
- If you downloaded a ZIP, extract it to a folder and run SIV.exe. If you used an installer, run the installed application.
- If Windows SmartScreen or antivirus warns about the executable, confirm the source and allow the app if you trust it.
2. Understand the main interface
- Summary/Overview: Top-level snapshot of CPU, memory, motherboard, GPU, storage and OS. Good for a quick health check.
- Hardware sections: Separate tabs or panes for CPU, memory, disks, GPU, network, sensors, and BIOS. Click any item to expand detailed fields.
- Sensors/Temperatures: Real-time readings for CPU/GPU temperatures, fan speeds, voltages, and power — important for thermal and power issues.
- Processes/Services (if available): Current running processes and resource usage to spot abnormal CPU or memory consumers.
- Logs/Errors: Any detected hardware errors or system event summaries shown for quick diagnostics.
3. Run basic diagnostics
- Start SIV and let it populate system data (a few seconds).
- Check CPU: verify model, core count, base/turbo clocks, and current utilization. High sustained utilization at idle indicates background processes or malware.
- Check Memory: installed capacity, slots used, speed, and timings. Mismatched DIMMs or incorrect speeds can cause instability.
- Check Storage: model, SMART status, temperature, and read/write statistics. Look for SMART warnings (Reallocated Sectors, Pending Sectors).
- Check Temperatures & Fans: idle vs load temps. CPU temps above ~85°C under load may require improved cooling. Fan not spinning or erratic speeds indicate cooling failure.
- Check Power & Voltages: large deviations from expected rails (+12V, +5V, +3.3V) can suggest PSU issues.
- Check GPU: driver version, temperature, and utilization; graphical artifacts or high temps may indicate GPU problems.
- Check Network: adapter status and link speeds if experiencing connectivity issues.
4. Use real-time monitoring
- Open the sensor pane and observe temperatures, voltages, and fan speeds while performing a stress task (e.g., run a benchmark or game).
- Note how temperatures and fan speeds change; slow or no fan response indicates fan control issues.
- Use utilization graphs to correlate high CPU/GPU usage with thermal or performance problems.
5. Export reports and logs
- Use SIV’s export or save function to generate a system report (text/CSV).
- Include exported reports when seeking help on forums or with support—reports provide precise hardware IDs, driver versions, and sensor logs.
6. Troubleshooting examples (actions to take)
- High CPU usage at idle: check the Processes list, update drivers, scan for malware, and review scheduled tasks.
- Overheating: clean dust, reapply thermal paste, improve case airflow, check fan headers and BIOS fan curves.
- Unstable system
Leave a Reply