F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Temperature reading is 69,000°C

Temperature reading is 69,000°C

Temperature reading is 69,000°C

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_TheTank_
Junior Member
48
03-25-2016, 12:36 PM
#1
I placed water on an HP envy x360 laptop. After drying, it opened and everything seemed fine. The Windows was running, though it was extremely slow—CPU clock stuck at minimum, fans spinning at 99%. I couldn’t get a battery level reading, and the BIOS displayed a temperature of 69,000°C. I thought these issues were linked to the laptop overheating and possibly catching fire. I replaced the battery, but nothing improved. It seems water may have damaged a part of the motherboard, preventing it from reading battery data. I considered asking the BIOS to ignore the high temperature or use a safe value, but I couldn’t find any guidance online. What should I do? Do you have any suggestions? Edit 1: The device has been completely disassembled, dried, and corrosion removed with alcohol (there was indeed corrosion on the battery connector). I believe I handled the hardware part well except for replacing the motherboard. Now I’m looking into software fixes.
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_TheTank_
03-25-2016, 12:36 PM #1

I placed water on an HP envy x360 laptop. After drying, it opened and everything seemed fine. The Windows was running, though it was extremely slow—CPU clock stuck at minimum, fans spinning at 99%. I couldn’t get a battery level reading, and the BIOS displayed a temperature of 69,000°C. I thought these issues were linked to the laptop overheating and possibly catching fire. I replaced the battery, but nothing improved. It seems water may have damaged a part of the motherboard, preventing it from reading battery data. I considered asking the BIOS to ignore the high temperature or use a safe value, but I couldn’t find any guidance online. What should I do? Do you have any suggestions? Edit 1: The device has been completely disassembled, dried, and corrosion removed with alcohol (there was indeed corrosion on the battery connector). I believe I handled the hardware part well except for replacing the motherboard. Now I’m looking into software fixes.

D
Daveses
Junior Member
14
03-27-2016, 11:08 AM
#2
Join the discussions! Many programs rely on a battery sensor, but in devices without it they show the highest possible code value. That’s quite a jump—about 60 times the melting point of the laptop’s aluminum shell...
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Daveses
03-27-2016, 11:08 AM #2

Join the discussions! Many programs rely on a battery sensor, but in devices without it they show the highest possible code value. That’s quite a jump—about 60 times the melting point of the laptop’s aluminum shell...

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kilian1902
Member
56
03-27-2016, 03:31 PM
#3
Thank you for the explanation. I see that my battery isn<|pad|>, but my computer still sees it as a normal value.
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kilian1902
03-27-2016, 03:31 PM #3

Thank you for the explanation. I see that my battery isn<|pad|>, but my computer still sees it as a normal value.

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Winkler1212
Member
172
03-29-2016, 01:40 PM
#4
Were you sure to remove all components and let everything air out? There could still be moisture trapped inside the board.
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Winkler1212
03-29-2016, 01:40 PM #4

Were you sure to remove all components and let everything air out? There could still be moisture trapped inside the board.

D
67
03-30-2016, 11:31 PM
#5
Earlier mentioned, carefully dismantle the device, allow it to dry completely, then apply isopropyl alcohol to remove any remaining rust.
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DragonKiller37
03-30-2016, 11:31 PM #5

Earlier mentioned, carefully dismantle the device, allow it to dry completely, then apply isopropyl alcohol to remove any remaining rust.

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Haz3lNut
Member
97
03-31-2016, 01:20 AM
#6
Consider this in the context of rice; it could help reduce excess moisture.
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Haz3lNut
03-31-2016, 01:20 AM #6

Consider this in the context of rice; it could help reduce excess moisture.

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BreddyBoom
Member
93
04-05-2016, 02:56 PM
#7
It has been completely taken apart, dried, and the corrosion was removed using alcohol (there was corrosion on the battery connector). I believe I’ve handled all the hardware except swapping out the motherboard. Now I’m looking for a software fix.
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BreddyBoom
04-05-2016, 02:56 PM #7

It has been completely taken apart, dried, and the corrosion was removed using alcohol (there was corrosion on the battery connector). I believe I’ve handled all the hardware except swapping out the motherboard. Now I’m looking for a software fix.

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arianed2001
Member
57
04-08-2016, 05:53 AM
#8
But the sensors are built into the CPU, and since it's a laptop, the CPU might be attached. Have you taken it out?
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arianed2001
04-08-2016, 05:53 AM #8

But the sensors are built into the CPU, and since it's a laptop, the CPU might be attached. Have you taken it out?

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hopsiii
Junior Member
46
04-14-2016, 07:14 PM
#9
I'm discussing the battery sensor specifically, not the CPU sensors.
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hopsiii
04-14-2016, 07:14 PM #9

I'm discussing the battery sensor specifically, not the CPU sensors.

D
DragonKitty1
Junior Member
10
04-16-2016, 07:00 PM
#10
I'm sorry for the misunderstanding. You should replace the battery if it's damaged, as it could pose a risk.
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DragonKitty1
04-16-2016, 07:00 PM #10

I'm sorry for the misunderstanding. You should replace the battery if it's damaged, as it could pose a risk.

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