Check to make sure you aren't using it on a bed, carpet, lap or anything that blocks the cooling vents, as this may be the problem. If you are not blocking the vents, you may have a lot of dust built up inside. Get some canned air and blow out all of the vents and ports. If this still doesn't solve your problem, you may have a program running that is very demanding on your processor, ram, video card, or hard drive. Is your computer very slow? If it is, this may be the problem. Finally, does your fan work? Can you hear it or feel it moving air out of the vents? If not, this could also be the problem. Sorry for the long post, but I hope this helps. Comment back with your results so I can help you further.
Try to put your laptop on a laptop cooler...there are a lot of laptop cooler in the market nowadays...its also advantage during long hours of using your laptop for not overheating your unit.since it has a fan that makes your unit cool and have proper ventalation.
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