battery problem

Jason Hayes jason at jasonhayes.org
Fri Oct 30 10:47:53 MST 2009


Quick fix if it is running hot - Get one of the cans of pressurized air and put 
the nozzle right up near the heat sink exhaust vents (will be on the back or 
side depending on your model). With the machine off, blow it out - if you get a 
lot of dust coming out, that may have been your problem (impeded air flow = hot 
CPU and/or video card). Most systems that I have seen have an intake and 
outlet for the air flow, so if you blow the air in one side, the dust will come 
out the other.

Once you get it cleaned out, try running it again and see if it runs cooler. 
If not, you may need to pull it apart, give it a real good cleaning, and put 
in some new heat sink compound. I did both with an older Acer laptop that I 
had been using for 3 + years and it ran almost like new. (It had been running 
real hot and shutting down, but after cleaning it out it was good to go.)

The good thing about cleaning the system out before doing the new power brick 
option is that it is free - just your time involved. Bad thing about that 
option is there's lots of little, delicate parts that can cause problems if 
you're not used to pulling things apart and putting them back together.

If you put it back together wrong, you could end up with two non-working 
bricks.

Jason

On Thursday 29 October 2009 01:05:14 pm mike havens wrote:
> Yea, sometimes the fan does seem louder than usual.This is a laptop we're
> talking about though. Do you think I should crack it open and blow it out
>  or just replace the brick. I was further thinking that because the brick
>  seems to fluctuate it's power supply less frequently (the power is more
> consistent) that if I were to replace the battery it would fix the problem
> because the battery has never been replaced and it is about 5 years old.
> 
> On 10/29/09, Dorian Monroe <dorian.monroe at cox.net> wrote:
> > Check the fans to be sure they're blowing and there aren't any
> > obstructions or clogged up with dust.  Or if the fans seem to be running
> > on high constantly (or spinning up to a higher rpm frequently).
> >
> > My Thinkpad T60 was overheating and shutting itself down once in a while
> > due to overheating, mostly when playing WoW (windows) or anything else
> > that did a lot of graphics processing.  I opened it up and cleaned off
> > the old heat sink compound and applied some new grease and its been
> > running fine.  I also use a laptop cooler whenever possible, that plugs
> > into the usb port that allows better air circulation than having it sit
> > flat on a table.
> >
> >
> > Sent from my blackberry
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: mike havens <bmike1 at gmail.com>
> > Date: Thu, 29 Oct 2009 11:08:50
> > To: Main PLUG discussion list<plug-discuss at lists.plug.phoenix.az.us>
> > Subject: Re: battery problem
> >
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