Overheating?
Moderator: Moderators
Overheating?
Since this forum got a lot of computer experts, I will ask there
... is it normal for a computer to get HOT then used for a long time? Because my one sometimes becomes hot enough to hurt my hand
...
- BlackLiger
- Posts: 1371
- Joined: 05 Oct 2004, 21:58
- BlackLiger
- Posts: 1371
- Joined: 05 Oct 2004, 21:58
Yeah yeah. I mean VERY hot. As in egg boiling point.Relative wrote:Most amazing observation evar!BlackLiger wrote:
My machine tends to get very hot in summer and not very hot in winter.
I must admit, however, thats not bad for a machine which has a fan and cooling unit rated for only half the stuff in there...
If you have a ventilator (I hope thats how you write it in englishBlackLiger wrote:Yeah yeah. I mean VERY hot. As in egg boiling point.Relative wrote:Most amazing observation evar!BlackLiger wrote:
My machine tends to get very hot in summer and not very hot in winter.
I must admit, however, thats not bad for a machine which has a fan and cooling unit rated for only half the stuff in there...
- grumpy_Bastard
- Posts: 105
- Joined: 18 Oct 2006, 22:31
If your CPU is hitting 60C, its not going to help it lead a long life, but if it was 40-ish or so, I wouldnt fuss about it. My videocard hits 80C or so during oblivion, but it doesnt start to throttle itself back till 140C (No, not a typo... one-hundred fourty).
The delta-T is what you have to look at, its one thing for me high temperatures in my hardware during the winter, but another when summer rolls around and it pushes close to 35C inside the room.
If you see smoke, just consider it an excuse to buy something new
.
The delta-T is what you have to look at, its one thing for me high temperatures in my hardware during the winter, but another when summer rolls around and it pushes close to 35C inside the room.
If you see smoke, just consider it an excuse to buy something new
- BlackLiger
- Posts: 1371
- Joined: 05 Oct 2004, 21:58
Considering I caused the power unit to explode last summer.... (got a higher rated one with a better cooling fan as replacement...)grumpy_Bastard wrote:If your CPU is hitting 60C, its not going to help it lead a long life, but if it was 40-ish or so, I wouldnt fuss about it. My videocard hits 80C or so during oblivion, but it doesnt start to throttle itself back till 140C (No, not a typo... one-hundred fourty).
The delta-T is what you have to look at, its one thing for me high temperatures in my hardware during the winter, but another when summer rolls around and it pushes close to 35C inside the room.
If you see smoke, just consider it an excuse to buy something new.
Explode? Didnt it damaged anything else?BlackLiger wrote:Considering I caused the power unit to explode last summer.... (got a higher rated one with a better cooling fan as replacement...)grumpy_Bastard wrote:If your CPU is hitting 60C, its not going to help it lead a long life, but if it was 40-ish or so, I wouldnt fuss about it. My videocard hits 80C or so during oblivion, but it doesnt start to throttle itself back till 140C (No, not a typo... one-hundred fourty).
The delta-T is what you have to look at, its one thing for me high temperatures in my hardware during the winter, but another when summer rolls around and it pushes close to 35C inside the room.
If you see smoke, just consider it an excuse to buy something new.
My old 1.3 T-Bird was the longest lasting most durable cpu I ever had.
It spent all its time hovering between 70 and 80 degrees, not to mention that when the guy at the computer shop was fitting it, he turned on the PC after mounting the chip without a heatsink or fan on it for a couple seconds, apparently to test it was working.
Course, most of you probably know that turning on a PC with no heatsink fries the cpu to like 150 degrees in the space of a few seconds ¬_¬
Still, T-Bird survived..
It spent all its time hovering between 70 and 80 degrees, not to mention that when the guy at the computer shop was fitting it, he turned on the PC after mounting the chip without a heatsink or fan on it for a couple seconds, apparently to test it was working.
Course, most of you probably know that turning on a PC with no heatsink fries the cpu to like 150 degrees in the space of a few seconds ¬_¬
Still, T-Bird survived..
