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| Questioning | Thermal heating in CPU When I open my computer, it says computer was turned off because of thermal over heating. Sometimes, while running , it abruptly turns off. Can anyone help me? One more thing , websites are like www. google.com But hypography is hypography.com/forums. Where is world wide web(www)? ---------------- Chinese Proverb:He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever. | |
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| Resident USSRian | Re: Thermal heating in CPU yes, that generally means that your computer is overheating? problem can be in great many places there, generally a thermal event is caused when one of the thermal sensors, either in your CPU or your GPU, detects a temperature that is dangerously high for normal operating conditions and shuts down your machine, so it would not cause hardware any harm. Therefore, youare either looking at your processor or your graphics card for this one, since i can say with like 95% certainty that it's your proc, follow the following. First: check the fans, make sure they are running, if not then there's your prolem Second: go to your local computer hardware store, ask for thermal grease, thermal compound, heat paste, thermal paste or heatsink compound, any one of these will weild you a little tube filled with a silicon grease that transfers heat from your processor to the heat sink, while you are there might also want to grab some alcohol wipe pads (trust me those things are nifty) Then go home, pop off the lid on your machine, take the heatsink off the processor, generally you'd want to pop out the processor as well, dont touch the pins and look carefully at how the processor was positioned in it's slot. then use one of those alcohol wipe pads thingies to wipe off the thermal paste on the processor, then the heat sink (do not put water on either one), let both dry, pop the proc back into it's respected slot (PAY REALLY CAREFUL ATTENTION, YOUR PROC IS MISSING A PIN ON ONE SIDE, MAKE SURE THAT THAT MISSING PIN MATCHES THE MISSING PIN WHOLE IN IT'S SOCKET), apply a generous amount of paste to the midle of the processor (you can follow this guide: How To Correctly Apply Thermal Grease | Hardware Secrets ), put the heatsink/fan assembly back in it's propper position ans secure it the same way it was secured before. Finally see if the thernal events return. At this point if your system is still shutting down due to thermal events, then up proc is shot and you should replace it.... but give us some feedback first ![]() ---------------- And remember that great question that Pierre-Simon Laplace and Sir Isaac Newton, Andrei Markov and David Hilbert, Richard Feynman and Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein and Edmund Halley did not come to ask throughout all of their dedication and work: "Who the hell is IMing me?" This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. ![]() | |
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| Wedding Planner ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Thermal heating in CPU Is this a laptop or a desktop? Before you do anything inside the computer, make sure you unplug it and hold down the power button for a few seconds to discharge the caps. Use a grounding bracelet or simply touch your hands to metal before putting your hands in the case. You don't want to short the motherboard with static electricity! Before trying Alex's suggestions above, I would check for dust build-up. When I was fixing computers, this was the case 90% of the time. Check the following places for dust: *rear fan port(s) (or side fan port if it a laptop) *all fans *heatsink fins *intake ports If you find dust that is impeding the passage of air anywhere in the case, then clean the dust out carefully and try starting it again. I don't recommend those dust spray cans as they have a tendency to discharge some liquid and you don't want liquid in your case. Also they have a tendency to blow fans backwards and ruin the bearings. Instead, use a dry, lint-free cloth to collect most of the dust and then you can use q-tips with alcohol to get the harder to reach places. (let the alcohol dry/evaporate completely before starting up computer) If dusting does not work, then try Alex's suggestions. If none of that works, post your results and one of us will help you from there. ![]() ---------------- Hypography Science Forums Moderator --- "There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew." - Marshall McLuhan "We must not forget that when radium was discovered no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. The work was one of pure science. And this is a proof that scientific work must not be considered from the point of view of the direct usefulness of it." - Marie Curie | |
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| Resident USSRian | Re: Thermal heating in CPU Quote:
Throughout my years of fixing hardware, dust does account for perhaps 40-50% or hardware problems, fans for maybe 5-6%, hard drives about 10%, motherboard and processor combined maybe 1-2%, ram 10-50%, and user errors or tech (the so proclaimed guys at the local repair shops, friends of customers family, etc) stupidity for the rest (leaves 5-10% or so) Quote:
Quote:
---------------- And remember that great question that Pierre-Simon Laplace and Sir Isaac Newton, Andrei Markov and David Hilbert, Richard Feynman and Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein and Edmund Halley did not come to ask throughout all of their dedication and work: "Who the hell is IMing me?" This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. ![]() | ||||
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| Resident Slayer | Re: Thermal heating in CPU As to your other question: Quote:
The next part of the name after the first dot from the right along with the TLD is the "domain name" and that's what you "own" when you have one. What comes after the next dot to the left of the domain name is your "sub-domain" which can map onto a "sub-net" but really you simply publish via your hosting company or your DNS provider what these sub-domain names are, and what IP addresses they map onto. You can have your e-mail server be "mail.example.com" and your webserver be "www.example.com", and these are the most popular sub-domain names, but they can be anything you want them to be. In the case of Hypography, "www.hypography.com" takes you to the main entry point for the Hypography website, while "hypography.com/forums" takes you directly to the discussion forums inside the site. These sites do not have to be overlapping, and they can be in entirely different locations: its entirely up to you! Note that some hosting providers will have limits on what you can do, and if you want to do anything complicated you might have to change hosting providers or see if they let you use an alternate DNS service. The heat was hot and the ground was dry, but the air was full of sound, ![]() Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | ||
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| Resident USSRian | Re: Thermal heating in CPU oh i forgot about that part of the question... oopsie. Domain Name there can be multiple levels of domain names: Top level being name.code such as hypography.com, example.org, example.us, example.info.... then you can have as many little lower level domains as you want. generally they point to services or places on your server: hypography.com/forums - points to the forums folder on the server Example Web Page - points to the web service on the example server ftp.example.com - points to an ftp server, other examples would include ntp,smb,krb whatever, there's many. you can have many lower level domains as well, if we wanted to, we could have cs.physscief.hypography.com/forums, that could point to computer science under physical scienceforums of forums on the hypography server.... there is a limit, and mostly people try to stick with 1 or lower 2 levels, but spammers can go crazy with like a dozen or so..... there must be a limit to the total amount of levels a domain may have, but at this current moment it's just not coming to me, if i had to guess, 255, but i may be wrong, read the wiki article! ---------------- And remember that great question that Pierre-Simon Laplace and Sir Isaac Newton, Andrei Markov and David Hilbert, Richard Feynman and Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein and Edmund Halley did not come to ask throughout all of their dedication and work: "Who the hell is IMing me?" This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. ![]() | |
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| Questioning | Thank you for all. Wonderful! ![]() 1.As for the suggestion of Alexander and Freeztar , I have already followed the two steps. The change is that the frequency of this problem has decreased. But hasn't reached the level of no-problem. Sometimes while working, I face blank screen suddenly and find that cabinet is restarting. Any solutions? ( cabinet -conatiner that contains CPU. I read somewhere that there is difference between CPU and the thing where it is stored. What do you call that container? Is it a cabinet?) 2.I have now understood the Hypograhy website's domain. ---------------- Chinese Proverb:He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever. | |
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| Holy cow! | Re: Thermal heating in CPU Uhm... Yes. Your CPU is the little chippie-thingy on your motherboard, the big green flat thing inside your computer. It's housed in the case. But that depends where you're from. Some people will call it the "box", some the "CPU" (which is wrong - the CPU is housed in it), or the Chest of a Thousand Tortures. It really depends where you're from. I'm not going to be nasty or anything, but judging by your comments, I'd really recommend you go to a computer shop, and let them check it out. (At your own peril, of course - 99% of the time the idjits at the computer stores are just that: Idjits. At least they give a warranty on their work. Or should, at least. That's the only reason it's not a bad idea to take your hardware there. They break it, they take it!) If you've applied all the solutions above, and de-dusted everything, and applied heat paste, etc., I'd really suggest you check out your power supply. An often-ignored issue, if your power supply ain't up to snuff, your processor might crash. Added any additional hard drives, or additional USB devices recently? I've had a funny on my machine a while ago: If I plug in my external USB harddrive, my network card dies. Event Viewer told me that there simply ain't enough juice to run my rig. Popped in a new Power Supply, problem solved. Checkit out, let us know... ---------------- Hypography Forums Moderator IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Bovinely blessed be thee. | |
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| Resident USSRian | Re: Thermal heating in CPU Quote:
B, yes the Power Supply could be an issue, but judging by what he said, he said it was a thermal event that was causing it, so if he dedusted everything and applied propper amount of thermal paste and all, it would almost self-suggest that his proc may be going bad too (maybe from overheating so much) dunno if it's free, but i would suggest runing some sort of hardware monitor software, and some sort of performance testing app that will run some hardware intensive test monitoring software, dunno if it's free or not SpeedFan - Access temperature sensor in your computer performance test, maybe run a trial of PassMark PerformanceTest - PC benchmark software ---------------- And remember that great question that Pierre-Simon Laplace and Sir Isaac Newton, Andrei Markov and David Hilbert, Richard Feynman and Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein and Edmund Halley did not come to ask throughout all of their dedication and work: "Who the hell is IMing me?" This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. ![]() | ||
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| Questioning | Quote:
I wonder how can it be so. It should not work at all. ![]() Why it is failing to start some time? ---------------- Chinese Proverb:He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever. | ||
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