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You are here: Home / Archives for overheating

Scott Taylor Compaq F700 System Repair on CNF7351XC6

December 3, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

James Howell
DoubleClickItToFixIt.com
7472 Nashville Street
Ringgold, GA 30736
706-307-9689
http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com

Scott,

This email will serve as an update on the status and repair of your systems sent in.

Currently I have listed the following machines sent in for repair by you:

Compaq F700 with the serialization of CNF7351XC6

Now, with the HP Compaq F700 with the serialization of CNF7351XC6 has been reflowed and is ready for return. The system is labeled HP Spare *****-001. The system required a reflow on the Nvidia GeForce MCP67MV-A2 chipset.

A power adapter was found with this system.

You also need to update the video drivers from Nvidia.com, ATI.com, and the BIOS from HP if one is to be applied. Please advise your end user to purchase a cooling pad to help insure the removal of heat from the system.

If you need more help in explaining these areas to your end user, please visit http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/helpful-hints/

Pictures of the repair can be viewed at http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/img if any are to be viewed.

Payment will be recovered at the time of delivery in person.

Filed Under: System Repairs Tagged With: altascene, amd, artic silver, artic silver 5, BGA, chipset, chipsets, CNF7351XC6, compaq f700, GeForce, MCP67MV-A2, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair, Scott Taylor

Jerry Rathje HP DV2700 System Repair on 2CE8072BDC

December 1, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

James Howell
DoubleClickItToFixIt.com
7472 Nashville Street
Ringgold, GA 30736
706-307-9689
http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com

Jerry,

This email will serve as an update on the status and repair of your systems sent in.

Currently I have listed the following machines sent in for repair by you:

HP DV2700 with the serialization of 2CE8072BDC

Now, with the HP DV2700 with the serialization of 2CE8072BDC has been repaired and is ready for return. The system is labeled HP Spare 460716-001. The system required a reflow on the Nvidia GeForce G86-630-A2, Intel SLA5Q, and Intel SLA5V chipsets.

No power adapter was found within the box.

You also need to update the video drivers from Nvidia.com and the BIOS from HP if one is to be applied. Please advise your end user to purchase a cooling pad to help insure the removal of heat from the system.

If you need more help in explaining these areas to your end user, please visit http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/helpful-hints/

Pictures of the repair can be viewed at http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/img

Your system was shipped without a prepaid Fedex label or account for return shipping. You have two options to make payment and have your system shipped back. Payment can be made by check or money order delivered to our shop or you can pay by COD when the Fedex truck delivers your package. The service requested was a reflow in the amount of $125 plus shipping which is estimated at $16.38. Your total check should be for the amount of $141.38. If you pay by COD, your shipping will be included in the amount plus a COD handling fee determined by Fedex based on the payment choice they accept from you. These fees range from $5 to $25, and are solely determined by Fedex and Fedex alone.

You have 30 days to make this payment from the time this email is sent. Payment can be delivered to our new office at the above address if you are mailing a check.

If you have a laptop that requires a reflow, and you would like to receive a service purchasing options are listed below.











Filed Under: System Repairs Tagged With: 460716-001, dv2000, DV2700, g86-630-a2, GeForce, hp, intel, jerry rathje, laptop, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair, SLA5Q, SLA5V

Gordon Shar HP DV9225US System Repair on CNF6523F97

November 24, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

James Howell
DoubleClickItToFixIt.com
7472 Nashville Street
Ringgold, GA 30736
706-307-9689
http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com

Gordon,

This email will serve as an update on the status and repair of your systems sent in.

Currently I have listed the following machines sent in for repair by you:

HP DV9225US with the serialization of CNF6523F97

Now, with the HP DV9225US with the serialization of CNF6523F97 has been reflowed and is ready for return. The system is labeled HP Spare *****-001. The system required a reflow on the Nvidia GeForce GO6150 (NF-G6150-N-A2) and NF-430-N-A3 chipsets.

A power adapter was found with this system.

The system also displayed a damaged MOSfet located at the power in cycling area. The damaged component was labeled AO4407 and was located on PQ1. PL11 was damaged on both sides, positive and negative, and was replaced accordingly. PD3 tested good, and was not changed.

You also need to update the video drivers from Nvidia.com, ATI.com, and the BIOS from HP if one is to be applied. Please advise your end user to purchase a cooling pad to help insure the removal of heat from the system.

If you need more help in explaining these areas to your end user, please visit http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/helpful-hints/

Pictures of the repair can be viewed at http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/img if any are to be viewed.

Payment will be recovered by way of Fedex COD.

Filed Under: System Repairs Tagged With: amd, AO4407, artic silver, artic silver 5, BGA, chipset, chipsets, dv9000, DV9225US, GeForce, go6150, Gordon Shar, hp, NF-430-N-A3, NF-G6150-N-A2, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair

Steven E. Orr HP DV7-1130US System Repair on CND84038L6

November 11, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

James Howell
DoubleClickItToFixIt.com
7472 Nashville Street
Ringgold, GA 30736
706-307-9689
http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com

Steven,

This email will serve as an update on the status and repair of your systems sent in.

Currently I have listed the following machines sent in for repair by you:

HP DV7-1130US with the serialization of CND84038L6

Now, with the HP DV7-1130US with the serialization of CND84038L6 has been repaired and is ready for return. The system is labeled HP Spare 486541-001. The system required a reflow on the ATI Radeon RX781 chipset. The system also displayed damaged memory in both sticks of Samsung DDR2 2GB. After replacing this RAM with a shop supplied 1GB RAM stick for testing your system displayed a booting system. The paperwork requested a virus cleaning, but the system displayed a Windows password. The password was removed to begin a virus cleaning which displayed a number of virus, malware, and Trojans within the system.

No power adapter was found within the box. Your paperwork also stated no adapter was shipped.

You also need to update the video drivers from Nvidia.com and the BIOS from HP if one is to be applied. Please advise your end user to purchase a cooling pad to help insure the removal of heat from the system.

If you need more help in explaining these areas to your end user, please visit http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/helpful-hints/

Pictures of the repair can be viewed at http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/img

Your system was shipped with a prepaid Fedex label for return shipping. Since that shipping label is to be used, you will need to mail and check or money order in the below amount to finalize the transaction, and post your system at completely paid off. The services requested were a reflow in the amount of $125.00 and a virus scanning in the amount of $50.00. Since your system required extra diagnostics, the memory is billed at $65.00 per 2GB RAM stick up to 4GB as previously located within your system. Also the virus cleaning was requested, but no password was supplied so the password removal is billed at $50.00 also. Your total check should be for the amount of $355.00. You have 30 days to make this payment from the time this email is sent. Payment can be delivered to our new office at the above address.

If you have a laptop that requires a reflow, and you would like to receive a service purchasing options are listed below.











Filed Under: System Repairs Tagged With: 486541-001, amd, artic silver, artic silver 5, ati, ati radeon, ATI Radeon RX781, BGA, chipset, chipsets, DV7, DV7-1130US, GeForce, hp, overheating, reflow, repair

Shantelle Polk HP DV6408NR System Repair on CNF7272MC2

November 11, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

James Howell
DoubleClickItToFixIt.com
7472 Nashville Street
Ringgold, GA 30736
706-307-9689
http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com

Shantelle,

This email will serve as an update on the status and repair of your systems sent in.

Currently I have listed the following machines sent in for repair by you:

HP DV6408NR with the serialization of CNF7272MC2

Now, with the HP DV6408NR with the serialization of CNF7272MC2 has been repaired and is ready for return. The system is labeled HP Spare 443775-001. The system required a reflow on the Nvidia GeForce GO6150 (NF-G6150-N-A2) and Nvidia NF-430-N-A3 chipsets.

No power adapter was found within the box.

Your system displayed a typical penny fix copper shimming repair. The previous repair was performed with a copper shim. This copper shim was disposed of by us. Please read our link here for a better explanation of why copper shims are not used by our repair facility: http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/update-this-is-why-you-do-not-use-copper-shims/

You also need to update the video drivers from Nvidia.com and the BIOS from HP if one is to be applied. Please advise your end user to purchase a cooling pad to help insure the removal of heat from the system.

If you need more help in explaining these areas to your end user, please visit http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/helpful-hints/

Pictures of the repair can be viewed at http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/img

Your system was shipped without a prepaid Fedex label or account for return shipping. You have two options to make payment and have your system shipped back. Payment can be made by check or money order delivered to our shop or you can pay by COD when the Fedex truck delivers your package. The service requested was a reflow in the amount of $125 plus shipping which is estimated at $16.38. Your total check should be for the amount of $141.38. If you pay by COD, your shipping will be included in the amount plus a COD handling fee determined by Fedex based on the payment choice they accept from you. These fees range from $5 to $25, and are solely determined by Fedex and Fedex alone. You have 30 days to make this payment from the time this email is sent. Payment can be delivered to our new office at the above address if you are mailing a check.

If you have a laptop that requires a reflow, and you would like to receive a service purchasing options are listed below.











Filed Under: System Repairs Tagged With: amd, artic silver, artic silver 5, BGA, chipset, chipsets, copper shim, dv6000, dv6408NR, GeForce, go6150, hp, NF-430-N-A3, NF-G6150-N-A2, NF-GO6150-N-A2, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair, turion x64

If copper shims do not work, then if I do a fan modification will that help keep my GPU cooler?

November 3, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

I get this question along with “Do you do fan modifications?” and “How do you do fan modifications?”

Here is a little tip, this concept is not a new one since I have written about how other online sellers including Precision Division out of Florida otherwise known as ibuiltonline perform his modification some 8 months ago when I first registered my website and placed the website online. You can see a video of them checking a system for the voltage on the board, but guess what voltage does not equal heat. Second the concept does more damage to your system than any good. Copper shims are the rave since it does so much for your system, but users fail to realize the risk that the modification does long term. The same is true with the fan modification.

First lets describe how the fan modification works and how it is performed. No need in getting excited, but yes I am selling you a trade secret for nada. Your fan comes with four wires. As I look at one I see a yellow, black, white, and red wire that plugs in by a Molex connector to the motherboard. If you diagram the wire schematic, you will see that the white and red wire both provide a voltage line out from the motherboard to the fan. By trimming the white wire, you have placed a direct untapped 12v line to the fan causing it to run a full RPMs. So the trick here is to run your fan at full speed, expel heat, and have a running system for how long, perhaps 120 days?

In my opinion, I see from a engineering stand point that this may be genius, but the catch. The fans are poor HEAT displacing devices in the first place. The fans are created, modeled, and recycled from Pentium M systems. The fans do not have the heat displacing capability in any capacity for a Dual Core system. What you see is not a modern marvel of engineering inside your system, but a modern marvel of accounting. Someone somewhere said that a redesign of an existing fan was cheaper than building a new one.

Then what about the modification? If you mod the fan to run a full RPMS, then how long will it last? Tell me, how old is your system? Maybe 2 or 3 years old. Then what you have is a used fan with stressed bearings, dried bearings, broken blades, maybe a stressed motor. I see modding the fan to run stronger and harder to be a unwise choice. This will help to push the system into a failure. When your fan fails then your chipset will overheat in perhaps two to three minutes. The pictures you have seen of heat guns doing damage, yeah the chipset can do the same to itself. Then in the end you will at least need a reflow, a fan, and a laptop cooler. In the extreme, you will need a CPU because they do pop like the GPU chipsets, a fan, a motherboard, and a laptop cooler. All because you wanted to get your system repaired, and you were handed a fan modified system.

I see a better alternative is this. Change your user habits, and use an external fan. I personally have three Dell D820s and D830s that I have reflowed. I reflow them myself, and have had to perform this task about 5 times due to wireless issues, but no video issues yet. I leave my systems running for hours at a time, but I own and run a reflow shop and computer shop so I have countless resources at my disposal. As a common user, you will not have that luxury.

I suggest the following to all my clients and everyone that calls me including my mother:

1: Turn your computer off when you are not using it. If you do not, think of all the power the system uses, all the other parts failing like the inverter and battery, and the heat buildup. When your laptop overheats and dries the thermal compound, the thermal compound starts to act as a insulator, ie. heat builder, than a transfer, ie. heat displacer.

2: Get a laptop cooler. I use Zalman coolers that are three fanned systems and my systems do not have issues. If you get a cheap cooler, then you get a cheap heat displacer.

3: Update your drivers. I see Nvidia.com places updated drivers about every 30 to 90 days on certain products. If you only check the HP.com website you will never find these drivers.

4: Ask questions. If you ask questions and get educated you can decide better. I find nothing wrong with one question or 100 questions. When you ask a business a few questions and that business has no time for you to answer them, then you cannot make an informed decision. I do not mind if you email me, call me, or even walk up to me to ask a question.

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: dv2000, dv6000, dv9000, fan modification, ibuiltonline, overheating, reflow, tx1000

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