#4
Post
by kodell » Thu Apr 27, 2006 10:52 am
I don't really know what you mean when you say it's overheating and locking up - if the fan comes on and runs all the time, then the below might be relevant. It might also be that it's locking up when running at temperatures it's designed for - if you're lucky it could be a memory chip or something easy to replace. (Do you any have no-name memory cards?) If you're unlucky it's a chip on the motherboard. You can diagnose this kind of thing with a can of cold spray, but it can be time consuming and frustrating if it's intermittent. Knowing the specific temperatures you're seeing that it's locking up at would be a help.
If it's in fact getting too hot, either it's consuming too much power or not dissipating it well enough:
Not dissipating it:
Poor thermal connectivity between heat sink and CPU – could someone have removed heat sink & reinstalled improperly?
Excess dust – not all that likely, unit is sealed pretty well. You could take the keyboard off & blow any dust out & verify that the heat sink looked like it was seated properly. I wouldn’t disassemble it more than that except to reseat the heat sink & only that after I've tried everything else.
Consuming too much power:
I would make sure the CPU is set for dynamic SpeedStep switching on both battery and AC. Download something like Notebook Hardware Control and check the temperatures of both the hard disk and cpu. Check power usage from battery maximizer – your usage should be around 10 watts. Under normal use (office applications, email, web surfing) the CPU should be < 50 degrees C & the fan should pretty much never come on.
Failing hard disks can heat up with no additional problems; some replacement hard disks do run much hotter. Having adequate memory to limit paging/defragging/making sure there’s no program that is doing a lot of disk accesses also help (a little - the disk will spin no matter what).
Some 3rd party wireless cards also consume more power than the system was designed for. Are you using any other peripherals that might be consuming power?
I don’t think the x30 runs hotter than any similar laptop – IBM has managed to eke out a pretty respectable running time out of a relatively modest battery – so it’s not really using that much power/creating much heat.