The title says it all. My laptop (specs at the bottom here http://notebook.cz/clanky/recenze-notebook/2009/hp-probook-4510s) started overheating about 5 months ago. When I played SC2 it would sometimes just shut down when there was long 200 vs 200 game going on. After a while it got worse and I could hardly play anymore (I still remember a game when the other guy started flaming me, I then decided to humiliate him with mothership+lots of cannons and when I was killing his last hatch with 200/200 and 4 bases, the laptop just shut down). I bought a laptop cooler and it was all good..for month. Then it all went to shit again and the only way I could play was opening windows in my room and decreasing romm temperature to around 10 °C. After few games I decided it's not really possible to continue in these conditions. I believe it was also caused by 1.2x patch, as day before it I could've played relatively well, and day after it was disaster.
So, it's been almost 2 months since my last SC2 ladder game. Even though I enjoy more watching and reading about BW/SC2, this really kills me. I can watch replays, but it's impossible to play a single game.
Is there ANYTHING (other than buying a new computer) I can do? I used to play on the lowest settings possible, never had a problem with FPS though. I think the shutting down is because of graphic card overheating..
The standard answer to this would be to clean the fans on your laptop. Essentially, they blow away the hot air created by your computer, cooling it down. However, over time, dust can collect in the fans, reducing their effectiveness. Here's an example of what I'm talking about: + Show Spoiler +
Depending on the laptop, the results may vary. However, this is the easiest to remedy, and most likely cause of your overheating issues. If this doesn't work, then you might need to reapply some thermal paste, but give this a shot first!
are you using the lowest settings? lower your resolution as well. it will decrease the amount of work your gpu needs to do => less heat. also try the things above. dust trapped in a laptop can greatly hinder the cooling ability.
Thanks guys, I know the first thing to do should be cleaning the fan, but I'm little bit afraid because I'm not expert in these things and I read it's quite difficult with this laptop, nevertheless, I'll probably have to try it. If I manage to open it.. can I use a handheld vacuum cleaner to remove the dust?
Seems to work well in letting some airflow under my laptop and has a couple fans to help as well. Propping your laptop up with a book or something to get some airflow under it would probably work fine too and is free =).
Seems to work well in letting some airflow under my laptop and has a couple fans to help as well. Propping your laptop up with a book or something to get some airflow under it would probably work fine too and is free =).
I wrote in OP I bought a cooler.. and yea, I have the same as you do.
I can play sc2 with a shitty laptop if I only use my cooler + low settings , you have to have a good cooler though. If that doesn't work and it doesn't as of what I can gather from the OP then opening the laptop and cleaning it is your best bet. After you have cleaned it though you will still need low settings and a cooler , best of luck
remove the covers form the bottum of the laptop or w.e and clean as much dust away as you can like people have said above.
What kind of cpu do you have in your laptop? You should be able to undervolt it via software which can save you 10 degree's easily depending on some things. It also does not reduce performance at all and is safe.
IF you tell what kind of cpu you have, i can try and find out the options orr w.e
Yeah clean the fan. I have a laptop too, and quite an old one too. I had the same issues. the fan started whirling as soon as i turned on, and never stopped. And after a while i couldn't even watch a youtube video or anything. Just make sure to check behind all the fans, and remove all bolts you find, because when i first took my laptop apart, I didn't find the place that was stuffed the most. Then when i did find it, i removed like a fistfull of dust. Pretty sick really. :D So good luck with it!!
is it enough if I remove the keyboard and then use a vacuum cleaner for the fan or do I need to remove the fan itself?
On April 05 2011 05:02 MrShankly wrote: What kind of cpu do you have in your laptop? You should be able to undervolt it via software which can save you 10 degree's easily depending on some things. It also does not reduce performance at all and is safe.
IF you tell what kind of cpu you have, i can try and find out the options orr w.e
what is undervolting and why everyone isn't doing it? Just wondering, never heard about it.
I have Core2Duo T5870 2 GHz if that's what you're asking about.
Clean your intakes and fans of your laptop as everyone else said.
However, it could be possible that your motherboard's heat-sinks were damaged/cracked/not distributing heat properly. If that's the case, get a replacement assuming that you have a warranty. If you don't you're pretty screwed.
On April 05 2011 04:10 ondik wrote: The title says it all. My laptop (specs at the bottom here http://notebook.cz/clanky/recenze-notebook/2009/hp-probook-4510s) started overheating about 5 months ago. When I played SC2 it would sometimes just shut down when there was long 200 vs 200 game going on. After a while it got worse and I could hardly play anymore (I still remember a game when the other guy started flaming me, I then decided to humiliate him with mothership+lots of cannons and when I was killing his last hatch with 200/200 and 4 bases, the laptop just shut down). I bought a laptop cooler and it was all good..for month. Then it all went to shit again and the only way I could play was opening windows in my room and decreasing romm temperature to around 10 °C. After few games I decided it's not really possible to continue in these conditions. I believe it was also caused by 1.2x patch, as day before it I could've played relatively well, and day after it was disaster.
So, it's been almost 2 months since my last SC2 ladder game. Even though I enjoy more watching and reading about BW/SC2, this really kills me. I can watch replays, but it's impossible to play a single game.
Is there ANYTHING (other than buying a new computer) I can do? I used to play on the lowest settings possible, never had a problem with FPS though. I think the shutting down is because of graphic card overheating..
Please help me
Been experiencing the same issue... ended up downloading a program that keeps track of the temperature and tried to figure out what was causing it... Obviously it was SC2, but it was also the fact that the laptop just sat flat on the table, preventing 100% ventilation beneath it. The solution was to put something below it, to raise the back-end so air could flow through more easily. The temperature dropped from about 86* to 64* gaming temperature.
On April 05 2011 05:02 MrShankly wrote: What kind of cpu do you have in your laptop? You should be able to undervolt it via software which can save you 10 degree's easily depending on some things. It also does not reduce performance at all and is safe.
IF you tell what kind of cpu you have, i can try and find out the options orr w.e
what is undervolting and why everyone isn't doing it? Just wondering, never heard about it.
I have Core2Duo T5870 2 GHz if that's what you're asking about.
It reduces the voltage going to the cpu basically. You reduce the voltage systematically testing the stability, and then once the computer crashes or w.e you put it back up a notch or two and voila, your computer/laptop now runs at lower temperatures.
This literally just happened to me. I was throwing witty bro-banter about in a TvZ when after about 16 minutes of back and forth, his final push came, and as I was dying, my laptop overheated. Afterwards, I went and cleaned out my fans and now my computer is fine.
This used to be a chronic problem for me several months ago until I realized that my fans had stopped working for some reason. Fixing the fans fixed the problem for me (well, until today D: ).