Thats for the information.
Black doesn't have to be "ground." If it is ground in the T20/T21 it could be an EMC ground, not necessarily a current-carrying ground. As far as using the case as a power return, my intuition bets against it. I haven't seen this in any consumer electronic or scientific instrument I can recall at the moment. It is generally the rule that power supply currents should run as close together, going out and coming back, as possible. This reduces impedance but most importantly greatly reduces EMI emmisions.
On the other hand, apart from professional interest, why would you want to hotwire it?
1. The fan cycles on and off based on the temperature of the CPU. The temperature at which the fan kicks on is ridiculously high. A CPU should run as close to ambient as practical to prolong its life.
2. When under varying loads, the fan kicks on and off every couple of minutes. The CPU core soars up somewhere not too far under the boiling point of water. When the fan kicks on the temperature drops tens of degrees in a short period of time. If there is anything worse than running a CPU too hot, its cycling the temperature up and down. This induces thermal stress on the CPU package and die. A CPU, any CPU, should run as close as practical to ambient without cycling.
3. If the fan stays off, heat escapes the CPU through conduction through the heat sink. This heats the air inside the laptop case and therefore contributes to the inside case temperature significantly. If the fan were on all the time, cool room air would constantly be drawn in to keep the heat sink at a low temperature, thus minimizing the contribution of the heat sink to internal case heating. (Ever feel how hot a PCMCIA card is after you pull it out? It's basically a "dipstick" for internal case temperature. Granted, PCMCIA cards are designed to survive this heat, nevertheless, heat is not good for electronics components, especially electrolytic capacitors.)
4. I probably will install a T21/T22 fan unit with the fancy heat sink compound. BUT, this won't improve my internal case temperature or average CPU temperature much.
Remember the fan won't be turned on until the CPU temperature is "too [censored] hot" already. The new fan and compound
will lower my maximum temperature and increase the rate of temperature change. The latter not really a good thing.
There are usually drawbacks to any solution and they will probably be increased dust accumulation and shorter fan life. As you know, fans are cheap. I'll stash one or two known-working fans away just in case. As far as the dust, I've owned my T20 for four years and just recently cleaned the fan. I use it a lot to rip DVD movies. It often runs 24/7. There was minimal dust. I run high-efficiency filters on my central heating system though and this could influence dust accumulation. I have no pets so this eliminates pet hair accumulating. T20 owners with cats and large dogs may not want to hard-wire their fan on permanently.
Any other questions?