Macs are designed to be able to run as high as 60 degrees C (114 F) day in and day out, without issue. Older intel Macs routinely got so hot Apple was too concerned about burning you, so the called them all "Notebook computers" . Once Apple-silicon Macs were introduced, notebook computers were finally cool enough to actually be used on your lap.
if you would like a deeper analysis, Consider downloading and running this little "discovery" utility, Etrecheck. It changes NOTHING. Etrecheck was developed by senior contributor here, and uses system calls to collect often-needed information.
it contains little tests for speeds of devices, CPU utilization, memory usage, energy usage and a digest of recent problems, in one easy to use package. it does not even need to be Installed. Because less can be learned when your Mac is running great, best time to run is when your problems are actually occurring, if possible.
if you follow the directions faithfully, its report (pre-laundered of all personally-identifiable information) can be "Shared" to the System ClipBoard, then Pasted into an ‘Additional Text’ window in a reply on the forums.
Use Etrecheck Pro for free:
http://Etrecheck.com
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