So it looks like 95.1ºC is my maximum on my machine... thanks
Stay as far away from the maximum temp as possible .
It will allow your Mac a greater opportunity to remain online without mandatory servicing .
Not only because you are then required to replace thermal materials , but that a cooler running machine will reduce thermal fatigue of individual components . In this case , a controller chip . Once a part has failed from thermal fatigue , all the re-thermal pasting and re-thermal gapping in the world won't help . Because the component is dead .
Normally , this not an issue most users of electronics have to worry about . But our cMPs are running for a much longer time than anyone expected , so our rigs have special needs .
So , yeah . Stay away from the max temps of components as much as possible .
This can be done with higher quality thermal materials , scheduled replacement of thermal materials , appropriately installed thermal materials , fine adjustments to third party ( like MFC ) SMC controlled system fans , the use of sensor utilities and grabbing otherwise hard to access data from terminal (like GPU temps ) . Technicians and enthusiasts like myself have a few other tricks , should we need them ( Laser / IR temperature guns used on components that have no accessible sensors , custom thermocouples so small they can be placed under heatsinks , exotic materials like graphite TIM pads ) .