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#1 |
ghettomodmaster
Join Date: Nov 2016
City & State: Bulgaria
My Country: Bulgaria
Line Voltage: 230VAC 50Hz
I'm a: Student Tech
Posts: 937
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![]() I wonder if drilling a few holes in the laptop case, on the bottom below the fan will actually help and decrease the CPU/GPU temps. I have one spare not so new laptop with first gen core i5, but the main issue is that while the cooling systen is clean, it runs rather hot - youtube tends to bring the laptop to about 60-64 degrees, even if power plan with 60% power limit restriction is used and the cpu itself does not go above 1.2-1.4GHz. It has integrated graphics, this is true, but the temps seem a little bit high... Even the SSD runs above 55-60 degrees, while it isnt actually intensively used...
Disclaimer - All temps are in Celsius...65C = 149F
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Useful conversions. I don't "speak" imperial. Please use metric, if you want to address me. 1km=1000m=100000cm, 1inch=2.54cm, 1mile=1609.344meters, 1ft=30.48cm 1gal(US)=3.785liters, 1lb=453grams, 1oz=28.34grams Last edited by televizora; 08-04-2021 at 09:52 AM.. |
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#2 |
Super Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2016
City & State: Valbonne, 06
My Country: France
I'm a: Knowledge Seeker
Posts: 3,561
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![]() 65°C is cold for a laptop.
A good amount of recent laptops are designed to run just below thermal throttling under load which is often 95°C to 105°C.
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#3 |
Great Sage 齊天大聖
Join Date: Dec 2009
City & State: Europe
My Country: some shithole run by Israeli agents
I'm a: Professional Tech
Posts: 26,399
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![]() reminds me of the old apple aluminium mono-shell designs - you could iron your trousers with those!!
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#4 | |
ghettomodmaster
Join Date: Nov 2016
City & State: Bulgaria
My Country: Bulgaria
Line Voltage: 230VAC 50Hz
I'm a: Student Tech
Posts: 937
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![]() Quote:
And there arent any bottom vents, so the airflow of the fan is not the best. BTW, the laptop is business series HP Probook 6540b... From the time, when HP still manufactured decent stuff Last edited by televizora; 08-04-2021 at 10:57 AM.. |
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#5 |
Badcaps Veteran
Join Date: May 2011
City & State: Windsor, Colorado
My Country: United States
I'm a: Hobbyist Tech
Posts: 2,227
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![]() I briefly thought about that on my old Toshiba Satellite L750. It also has no direct air intake for the fan, but it would throttle when fully assembled. It would "only" reach 80°C when disassembled (with a Core i3, integrated graphics, and some Arctic Silver 5 that's older than the laptop itself).
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#6 |
Badcaps Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2013
City & State: San Antonio
My Country: United States
Line Voltage: 120v 60hz / 240v 60hz
I'm a: Hardcore Geek
Posts: 582
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![]() I think the thin plastics involved in laptops wouldn't take kindly to drilling holes. Unless it never left a desk, it would disintegrate in a short period of time.
If it never left a desk it probably wouldn't be too hard to 3d print a new case with better airflow if you had a 3d printer big enough. |
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#7 |
Comrade Glimmer
Join Date: Aug 2007
City & State: tehas
My Country: US
Line Voltage: 120VAC 60Hz
I'm a: Professional Tech
Posts: 4,815
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![]() If there is space, you can also put the thin copper heatsinks with adhesive that they use for memory cooling on the heatpipes. I did this for my asus gaming laptop and it took the temps, well, a little bit down
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