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03-11-2021 02:25 PM - edited 03-11-2021 02:36 PM
My wife is complaining about my noisy laptop. She is right. It is noisy and not just when thrashing the CPU or GPU, like playing games.
If the CPU usage gets above 10% then the CPU temperature goes above 50 degC and the fan comes on full blast. It stays on full blast until the temperature drops to 40 degC. This is the idle temperature. The GPU is at 35 degC. The disk drives are not being accessed.
The BIOS has been updated to the latest (F20).
Windows and the drivers are up to date.
I have tried underclocking, but temps only dropped by 1 or 2 degC.
Fan intakes are clear and clean.
Not had the laptop long enough to accumulate dust in the fan.
Performance control is on comfort.
Is this normal temperatures?
I would have expected the fan to ramp up speed with temperature, but appears to be either off or in tornado mode.
My daughter has a laptop of a similar spec (Different manufacturer) and that is nothing like as noisy.
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03-14-2021 06:57 AM
Thank you for posting on the HP Support Community.
Don't worry as I'll be glad to help,
I appreciate your efforts to try and resolve the issue. This sounds like hardware related issue with the fan and in order to fix this issue, your computer needs to be serviced. As we have limited support boundaries in the support community as of now.
I would request you to reach out to our Support and our Support Engineers should be able to check the available service options in order to diagnose the computer physically. HP Support can be reached by clicking on the following link: www.hp.com/contacthp/
Please feel free to contact us here anytime you need any further assistance. Please click “Accept as Solution” if you feel my post solved your issue, it will help others find the solution.
ECHO_LAKE
I am an HP Employee
03-14-2021 06:57 AM
Thank you for posting on the HP Support Community.
Don't worry as I'll be glad to help,
I appreciate your efforts to try and resolve the issue. This sounds like hardware related issue with the fan and in order to fix this issue, your computer needs to be serviced. As we have limited support boundaries in the support community as of now.
I would request you to reach out to our Support and our Support Engineers should be able to check the available service options in order to diagnose the computer physically. HP Support can be reached by clicking on the following link: www.hp.com/contacthp/
Please feel free to contact us here anytime you need any further assistance. Please click “Accept as Solution” if you feel my post solved your issue, it will help others find the solution.
ECHO_LAKE
I am an HP Employee
03-20-2021 05:57 AM
What I think would be useful here is a guide to expected behaviour so that people looking at this ticket in the future can ascertain whether they have a possible faulty laptop or whether the behaviour is as expected. Therefore a set of rough ballpark temperatures would be useful. I appreciate that this is not an exact science, but some broad expected values would be useful.
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