there may be accurate sensors out there, but I would use a decent multimeter,(oscilloscope would be cool, you could check for ripple..etc)
what you can do is use a multimeter to calibrate the sensor, do it a couple of times over a couple of days and if the reading are not getting more consistant then you have a crap sensor.
On the whole voltage sensors on mobo's are just to help sell them and will never be that accurate.
Mulitimeters have temperature correction and in built reference voltages so a simple voltage sensor will never be that accrate.
as to accuracy of the software...its not difficult to be accurate if calibrated correctly AND if they have decent sensor. (but why does my -5volt read as 12?)
what you can do is use a multimeter to calibrate the sensor, do it a couple of times over a couple of days and if the reading are not getting more consistant then you have a crap sensor.
On the whole voltage sensors on mobo's are just to help sell them and will never be that accurate.
Mulitimeters have temperature correction and in built reference voltages so a simple voltage sensor will never be that accrate.
as to accuracy of the software...its not difficult to be accurate if calibrated correctly AND if they have decent sensor. (but why does my -5volt read as 12?)
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