Idle temperature for CPU laptop
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17/12/2021
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L leiyongHonorableNov 9, 20136010,5202 Dec 20, 2013
Hi. I got my hands on a laptop and just as a precaution I figured I might as well find out what are the safe temps for it. specs: 17,5" Acer V3-772G (1080p) Intel I5-4200M Nvidia 750M 750GB HDD+500GB HDD+125GB SSD Temperature so far: CPU; surfing/movies: 40-48¤C ; gaming: 63-67¤C with a few spikes at 70¤C GPU; temperature is usually 10-15¤C lower than CPU At what temperature will heat damage my laptop ? Also, at what temperature should I get worried about cleaning/getting a laptop cooler ? Thanks in advance 0 vmemHonorableFeb 17, 201260010,6105 Dec 20, 2013
laptop components are generally designed to tolerate fairly high temperatures. typically anything under 80-85 C is perfectly fine and within normal range. so your temperatures are actually excellent and well under the safety cap. 0 vmemHonorableFeb 17, 201260010,6105 Dec 20, 2013
laptop components are generally designed to tolerate fairly high temperatures. typically anything under 80-85 C is perfectly fine and within normal range. so your temperatures are actually excellent and well under the safety cap. 0 M menetlausDistinguishedJul 19, 200725018,5903 Dec 20, 2013
Anything new has thermal protection mechanisms built in. Your laptop will not melt regardless of what you do with it... but it will slow the CPU/GPU down once the thermal limits have been exceeded (usually in the range of 90-110C). If you are worried about temps, simply prop the back of the laptop up with a book (or anything) to improve airflow. I wouldn't worry about a cooler unless you want to spend a lot of time with a 17" laptop on your lap/bed/couch (basically any non hard surface that will block the air vents) 0 G GuestGuestDec 21, 2013
High heat is tolerated well by laptops, but it will marginally decrease the life of your components from thermal cycling. If you're really worried, every once in a while take off the heat sinks and apply new thermal paste. 0 J jarotechDignifiedOct 13, 20123,298216,810579 Dec 22, 2013
High heat is tolerated well by laptops, but it will marginally decrease the life of your components from thermal cycling. If you're really worried, every once in a while take off the heat sinks and apply new thermal paste. Hi, if you have a personal belief that "High heat is tolerated well by laptops, but it will marginally decrease the life of your components from thermal cycling" is true, you must provide some facts from your belief. I'm working in the field of repairing printed circuit boards, I disagree with your assumption. 1 G GuestGuestDec 23, 2013
jarotech : High heat is tolerated well by laptops, but it will marginally decrease the life of your components from thermal cycling. If you're really worried, every once in a while take off the heat sinks and apply new thermal paste. Hi, if you have a personal belief that "High heat is tolerated well by laptops, but it will marginally decrease the life of your components from thermal cycling" is true, you must provide some facts from your belief. I'm working in the field of repairing printed circuit boards, I disagree with your assumption. Thermal cycling of varying dT have been tested in hundreds of studies. All have found a higher dT is inversely proportional to the time to fail. Intel I7 processors for desktop allow temp of up to 75 deg C. Intel I7 processors for laptop allow temps up to 100 deg C. Neither of these are opinions, nor are they controversial. |