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02-01-2022
08:59 PM
- last edited on
02-02-2022
06:58 AM
by
Ric_ob
When I children do lectures in zoom cloud meetings some time display gones but audio comes.This while I use more power in my pc.HP please help I am very worried because of this problem.My pc details-
Serial No.-[Personal Information Removed]
Model No.-hp-20-e040in
Product No.-N4R57AA#ACJ
Limited warranty:1y/1y/1y
(M3H12AV)
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Accepted Solutions
02-02-2022 02:29 AM
@Aarav17 -- it might be overheating of the video-adapter in your computer, causing it to stop sending output to your screen. How warm/hot is the air being exhausted through the vents in your computer's case?
02-02-2022 02:29 AM
@Aarav17 -- it might be overheating of the video-adapter in your computer, causing it to stop sending output to your screen. How warm/hot is the air being exhausted through the vents in your computer's case?
02-02-2022 09:49 AM
@Aarav17 / @Niket08 -- how old is your computer? If it is a few years old, and it "lives" in a dusty environment (cat or dog hair), then you could try:
- shutdown the computer
- disconnect the power-cord
- for a laptop, remove the battery
- hold-down the on/off switch for a few seconds, to drain any "residual" power
- for a laptop, take a can of compressed air, and shoot into every intake/exhaust port, to try to blow-out any accumulated dust
- for a desktop computer, remove a side-panel, and use a can of compressed air, focusing on the blades of the fan on top of the heat-sink on top of the processor, and on the heat-sink itself, and, if present, on the blades of the fan on the "inside-back" of the computer's case. Also, shoot air into all the vents of the power-supply. If you see any dust on the edges of the fan-blades, gently remove any dust. If your computer has an add-in video-card, there might be a fan on that card. Shoot it, too. Also, check that every fan spins freely -- no seized-up ball-bearings. After, while you can still see the fans inside the case, reconnect the power-cord, and power-on the computer, to confirm that the fans do spin. After a few seconds, disconnect the power-cord to cut the power to the computer. Replace the side-panel. Reconnect the power-cord. Start-up the computer, use it for 10 minutes, and again measure the temperature of the warm air.
If step #6, above, exceeds your comfort-level for "tinkering" with the computer, then remove the side-panel, and just look for dust. Then, replace the side-panel, and take the computer to a computer technician, for them to do the physical "cleaning".
I hope this helps.
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