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Hi,I can go to the dollar bill store and get a whole set of the tinyscrewdrivers for $1.00Great for those tiny screws in plastic and the top of regulatorson circuit boards, but, if you touch something without rubbergloves on around the circuit board be prepared for a very, very,sizable shock. Computer engineers only should ever touch anyof those regulators, if any, or the surrounding framework.My machine hovers around 135-140 F, when in heavy use it's 153 Fwith the fan on. Then in seconds after the process finishes it returnsto 135-140 F and just hovers there again, fan off.So my CPU sensor is working and overall everything is working, soI'll leave my machine as-is for the time being.regards,FF
My machine now hovers around 115ºF, Before I used the toothpick it hovered around 160ºF and just watching a video clip would easily bring it over the limit where the system would shut down (194ºF to be precise). This doesn't mean that a paint brush or a pipe cleaner wouldn't be more effective than a toothpick. The point of my first post was just that compressed air and vacuum cleaners aren't enough.
Quote from: Bald Brick on September 05, 2012, 03:34:13 PMMy machine now hovers around 115ºF, Before I used the toothpick it hovered around 160ºF and just watching a video clip would easily bring it over the limit where the system would shut down (194ºF to be precise). This doesn't mean that a paint brush or a pipe cleaner wouldn't be more effective than a toothpick. The point of my first post was just that compressed air and vacuum cleaners aren't enough.The bottom of my netbook has 2 tiny screws in plastic releasing one panel.Next time at the dollar store I'll get a set of those screwdrivers.Might be worth a look see as this machine is close to 3 years old.Could be some dust affecting it a degree or two.thanks for the advise,FF