The only reason which causes laptops to generate excess heat is because of the usual ineffective cooling system present inside. In order to endorse and sell their laptops, manufacturers don't usually focus more on its stability but on its looks, specifications and other influences that people usually consider while buying a laptop.
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Wouldn't it be a problem generated by excessive heat? Check the temperature inside the laptop, and also if the fan is workin properly. Also dust in front of heatsink can prevent appropriate cooling.
It doesn't run at full speed until the processor has generated heat. It will speed up long enough for the excessive heat to dissipate then will run at a slower speed. If it stops completely it needs to be replaced.
1) Most probably is your CPU get overheating or get damage 2) if your laptop under warranty, please send it to vendor for suitable hardware replacement
Most newer lap top computers generate a lot of heat. The designers of the machine walk a narrow line between efficiency and customer satisfaction. The heat comes from the processor and the power supply of the screen. Designers incorporate a standard called heat pipe design into cooling the CPU along with a small fan sometimes. The heat pipe design is a static (no electricity used) means of wicking away the heat from the processor. When the temperature goes higher than the heat pipe can act, a small fan cuts in to reduce the temperature, but at a cost of using electricity from your batteries. The heat of the lap tops have caused people to seek medical help for excessive reddened legs, thus generating a medical syndrome called "Lap top Syndrome"
The batteries are LI-ion (Lithium Ion) construction and have to be re-charged with extreme care as excessive heat generated by charging can case the lithium to burn and cause a fire. Battery designers have placed a small smart chip in the battery pack to monitor the voltage levels and this chip will shut the battery down if too much heat is detected. Since the batteries are of Li-ion design, they start
When the processor overheats it slows down to lessen the amount of heat generated to prevent damage. Things you can do, is use canned air to blow out the vents (Both intake and exhaust) several times. Also make sure the fan is operational (You can run the fan test) The heatsink may need replacement if the tubes have lost their vacuum or you can add some arctic silver heat compound to mitigate heat
The computer was probably not turned off to begin with, and thus it was active emitting heat. This heat had nowhere to go since it was in a case and heated the laptop to a high degree. If there is any damage it would be a very, very small amount.
For laptop computers there is little you can do internally - for example, you cannot replace the cpu heatsink/fan with any other one than the same model. However I've had pretty good results by getting a nice laptop stand that has one or two large fans built into the stand. This dissipates the heat generated by the laptop much more effectively than sitting on a flat desk or other surface, and with luck, it may allow you to game on without shutting down.
Also, you can turn off some of the game effects - which requires less processing, thus less heat is generated.
Sounds like an overheating problem. The hard drive spins and generate heat in software installation. Editing pictures loads the CPU that heats up. Make sure the laptop is well ventilated. Try to use a laptop cooler.
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