F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking is 60c hot for a laptop ?

is 60c hot for a laptop ?

is 60c hot for a laptop ?

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Goldensoul133
Member
129
12-02-2016, 06:16 AM
#1
I usually play games at 720p and my laptop shuts down almost at 60c when running a 2016 game. Is it okay to be inside while playing for four hours? Will that affect the lifespan of the CPU or GPU? Sorry for the poor English, thank you.
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Goldensoul133
12-02-2016, 06:16 AM #1

I usually play games at 720p and my laptop shuts down almost at 60c when running a 2016 game. Is it okay to be inside while playing for four hours? Will that affect the lifespan of the CPU or GPU? Sorry for the poor English, thank you.

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Blaster12121
Member
155
12-07-2016, 08:40 AM
#2
HP components operate at higher temperatures than intended, causing them to fail earlier. I suggest you save fan speed data and increase fan operation.
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Blaster12121
12-07-2016, 08:40 AM #2

HP components operate at higher temperatures than intended, causing them to fail earlier. I suggest you save fan speed data and increase fan operation.

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UnicornCracker
Senior Member
663
12-14-2016, 03:32 AM
#3
60c is quite warm, yet certain laptops can manage it. Which one do you own? Also, extremely high temps could damage the motherboard before harming the CPU or GPU.
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UnicornCracker
12-14-2016, 03:32 AM #3

60c is quite warm, yet certain laptops can manage it. Which one do you own? Also, extremely high temps could damage the motherboard before harming the CPU or GPU.

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Alberdext
Junior Member
8
12-16-2016, 04:19 AM
#4
My HP Pavilion 15t laptop is running Windows 10 Home 64 with a 6th Gen Intel Core i7-6500U processor, dual-core, and NVIDIA GeForce 940M graphics card. It has 8GB of DDR3L RAM and an 1TB hard drive spinning at 5400 rpm. Thank you.
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Alberdext
12-16-2016, 04:19 AM #4

My HP Pavilion 15t laptop is running Windows 10 Home 64 with a 6th Gen Intel Core i7-6500U processor, dual-core, and NVIDIA GeForce 940M graphics card. It has 8GB of DDR3L RAM and an 1TB hard drive spinning at 5400 rpm. Thank you.

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eduardodd08
Posting Freak
852
12-19-2016, 05:02 AM
#5
HP components operate at higher temperatures than intended, causing them to fail earlier. I suggest you save fan speed data and increase fan operation.
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eduardodd08
12-19-2016, 05:02 AM #5

HP components operate at higher temperatures than intended, causing them to fail earlier. I suggest you save fan speed data and increase fan operation.

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kingofender123
Junior Member
3
12-19-2016, 12:35 PM
#6
The temperatures are fine, my Lappy's runs stay around 75-80 during about four hours of gaming. It worked for a week without needing a fan (80-99). No issues at all—just make sure to clean the laptop from the inside.
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kingofender123
12-19-2016, 12:35 PM #6

The temperatures are fine, my Lappy's runs stay around 75-80 during about four hours of gaming. It worked for a week without needing a fan (80-99). No issues at all—just make sure to clean the laptop from the inside.

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ARTHUR_XTREME
Junior Member
35
12-27-2016, 06:15 AM
#7
We're discussing a low-power GeForce 920 with a low-power CPU. I wouldn't risk my laptop, as HP didn't design it for those temperatures.
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ARTHUR_XTREME
12-27-2016, 06:15 AM #7

We're discussing a low-power GeForce 920 with a low-power CPU. I wouldn't risk my laptop, as HP didn't design it for those temperatures.