Compatible Support Forums: How hot does a Notebook PC run?

Jump to content

Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

How hot does a Notebook PC run?

#1 User is offline   Phalanx-Imawano 

  • member
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 139
  • Joined: 29-April 02

Posted 19 November 2005 - 12:32 PM

Just concerned about something. I recently bought a Notebook PC (Neo Q-Note Endura 350SL, Celeron 1.3GHz, 256MB RAM, Sis M661MX + SiS 963L Chipset, 40GB Hard Disk), and after just a few days of use, it runs quite hot. Using Speedfan, it reports the CPU to be a scorching 63C during idle (no programs running), and as high as 68C when running a program like Windows Media Player and viewing a movie. To be safe I also bought a Notebook PC cooling pad (a pad placed under the Notebook PC, and has a fan blowing upwards at the Notebook's underside), though it's still that hot.

Is this cause for alarm? Should I use my Notebook PC in say an airconditioned room?
0

#2 User is offline   sqwer 

  • stranger
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 1
  • Joined: 17-December 05

Posted 17 December 2005 - 06:15 PM

hey. =) I'm thinking of buying the same model. how's it worked so far? i'd really appreciate hearing your feedbach.
0

#3 User is offline   jmmijo 

  • veteran
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 1550
  • Joined: 29-May 02

Posted 18 December 2005 - 01:52 AM

Probably not in that you have to understand that notebooks have even less free air space then slimline's do so there is less ambient air to help cool things down.

Even on an older Celeron/Socket 370 notebook like yours the cooling method is still most likely aluminum as the cooling block instead of copper like most of todays machines. This helps to save weight however it also ins't as good a heat transfer material as copper is.

68c is still well within the manufacturers specs, which I think is 90c on on the socket 370 cpu's wink

You could however check with the manufacturer of the notebook and find out if they offered a copper cooling solution for that model or not.

Another option is to remove the CPU cover and see if the heatsink is removable and check out the thermal paste, it maybe that is has dried up and needs to be cleaned off and a fresh layer of paste added again. You will be surprised at how well even the basic thermal paste does to help the heat transfer to the cooling device laugh
0

#4 User is offline   Phalanx-Imawano 

  • member
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 139
  • Joined: 29-April 02

Posted 03 February 2006 - 03:58 PM

Um, it's not a Celeron Socket370. It's a Celeron-M (Socket-479).

Anyway I've not had any serious problems yet (as in no BOSD yet), considering I sometimes let it run 24/7 (eg when downloading large files).




0

#5 User is offline   lostcoders 

  • stranger
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 3
  • Joined: 08-February 06

Posted 08 February 2006 - 12:12 PM


0

#6 User is offline   LivnLarge 

  • stranger
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 18
  • Joined: 26-January 06

Posted 10 February 2006 - 05:38 AM

Originally posted by jmmijo:
Quote:
Another option is to remove the CPU cover and see if the heatsink is removable and check out the thermal paste, it maybe that is has dried up and needs to be cleaned off and a fresh layer of paste added again. You will be surprised at how well even the basic thermal paste does to help the heat transfer to the cooling device laugh


I am no expert with computers, but one day while shopping for my 200GB Seagate external drive; I ran into this guy who was a computer junky with like this super system he made, and he told me to first dont buy the external drive to buy the internal and then go to newegg.com which i have never heard of at the time... and to buy an enclosure case to make it an external... which i did and happy that i did.

Anyways, i have a Compaq Presario notebook and it too heats up. My brother has a Dell which heats up even worst because Dell made some notebooks that all do this. So expext your notebook to heat up.

But what im getting to is what the guy told me... the heatsing thermal oil. That the factory puts very little on when you get it and that adding more oil to it will cause it to stop overheating. I yet have to do this because im too lazy too... and dont know what im doing. So chances are I would screw it up.

p.s. my bro bought probably the same cooling pad with fans blowing up into the notebook.. Has two fans, grooves thru the pad and connects to your laptop via usb? So far it works great, but notthe best.
0

Share this topic:


Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users