question about how hot the mains power supply gets on a T41
question about how hot the mains power supply gets on a T41
hi folks
Newbie here again...
How hot does your thinkpad main power adapter get?
And how safe is it really to leave it always plugged into the mains.
Had mine on for about 10 hours today and it is quite hot. but after taking it off the mains, it cooled down in about 10 minutes.
How do others use their thinkpads with the mains?
thanks
Leslie
Newbie here again...
How hot does your thinkpad main power adapter get?
And how safe is it really to leave it always plugged into the mains.
Had mine on for about 10 hours today and it is quite hot. but after taking it off the mains, it cooled down in about 10 minutes.
How do others use their thinkpads with the mains?
thanks
Leslie
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Greg Gebhardt
- thinkpads.com customer

- Posts: 832
- Joined: Tue May 11, 2004 6:29 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, Florida
In general I have the transformer all day long, either at work or at home.
When I unplug the transfo after work, I must admit it is quite hot. Not that hot that it burns or untouchable but it does seem to be overly hot.
Then again there are a few laptops at work and all of the transfos are hot
after a period of 1 hour or more.
When I unplug the transfo after work, I must admit it is quite hot. Not that hot that it burns or untouchable but it does seem to be overly hot.
Then again there are a few laptops at work and all of the transfos are hot
after a period of 1 hour or more.
IBM ThinkPad T43p.
IBM ThinkPad T41p.
IBM ThinkPad T41p.
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hausman
- Senior Member

- Posts: 568
- Joined: Thu Apr 15, 2004 10:45 am
- Location: Toronto, eh? Great White North
That can't be. An adapter that's plugged into the AC mains is warm. It takes power to make it warm.ian wrote:Zero volts amps watts joules/sec litres
Power bricks use a small transformer to bring the voltage down from 120/240V to 12V. Even if they're not connected to any device, if they're plugged into the AC mains the primary coil of the transformer is still connected across the AC line and therefore still draws some power.
Dorian Hausman
SL500 (2746-CTO) • X61s (7666-34U) • T60p (2007-93U) • A21p (2629-HWU) • eXThinkpad (5160-087)
SL500 (2746-CTO) • X61s (7666-34U) • T60p (2007-93U) • A21p (2629-HWU) • eXThinkpad (5160-087)
I looked up the specs for similar 100V-220V brick type AC adaptors w/72 watt output and they have efficiencies that range from 80-85% percent at, what I am guessing, full load. I'd like to think that IBM AC adaptors are at the higher end of the efficiency scale so lets say they lose 15% while being used. 15% of 72W is 10.8 watts so worst case scenario a plugged in AC adaptor thats doing nothing will waste a max 10.8 watts. Thats a very rough estimate btw.
10.8watts * 24 hours a day * 365 days a year = about 94.6kW-hours wasted a year based on that rate.
My local price per kW-hour is about 13 cents/kW-Hr so thats about $12-13 dollars a year.
This is MAX btw...it is probably less.
10.8watts * 24 hours a day * 365 days a year = about 94.6kW-hours wasted a year based on that rate.
My local price per kW-hour is about 13 cents/kW-Hr so thats about $12-13 dollars a year.
This is MAX btw...it is probably less.
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ian
- **SENIOR** Member

- Posts: 765
- Joined: Sun Apr 25, 2004 1:18 am
- Location: Auch, SW France
- Contact:
I was rather under the impression that this power drain only occured if there were a complete circuit - ie; that tha laptop was connected. I COULD of course be wrong, and will no doubt be lambasted for my ignorance. After owning UNOs one becomes used to this of course - which is not to say I believe you either.
Ian at thinkpads dot com
Yeah, I mean normally one would assume "hey, its not doing anything, how could it use up juice?" Which is correct if it really wasn't doing anything. But all AC adaptors are warm/hot when plugged in, meaning they are dissipating some kind of heat from the internal circuitry inside doing something.ian wrote:I was rather under the impression that this power drain only occured if there were a complete circuit - ie; that tha laptop was connected. I COULD of course be wrong, and will no doubt be lambasted for my ignorance. After owning UNOs one becomes used to this of course - which is not to say I believe you either.
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Greg Gebhardt
- thinkpads.com customer

- Posts: 832
- Joined: Tue May 11, 2004 6:29 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, Florida
You might think so but my power brick is slightly warm when not in use. Slightly warm required energy, so it must be using electricity to produce that heat. My brick get warmer when in use and not charging the battery. If I have run the battery down and plug it in, the power brick get even warmer but never what I would say hot.ian wrote:I was rather under the impression that this power drain only occured if there were a complete circuit - ie; that tha laptop was connected. I COULD of course be wrong, and will no doubt be lambasted for my ignorance. After owning UNOs one becomes used to this of course - which is not to say I believe you either.
Greg Gebhardt
Jacksonville, Florida
Jacksonville, Florida
Heh, I really wish that were the reason. I don't want to say it is a problem but those little ac adapter bricks running on idle around the world do add up and thats alot of wasted resources. I personally have about 30 of those things plugged in at my place, ranging from the cell phone power plugs to the huge HP printer blocks, all dissipating heat and wasting energy while we speak. But I understand that its all a trade off between the cost that the consumer is willing to pay, I personally wouldn't want to pay $$$ dollars for a super high efficiency load detecting/switched ac adapter block for my Samsuck cell phone so I could save the $2 every year. Heh.ian wrote:Alright, I'll go for that - I always thought they were warm 'cos they were happyI know I am...
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