Laptop fan - Replace or not
Laptop fan - Replace or not
I just discovered that the fan on my 3 year old laptop is dead. I don't use the laptop that much, maybe 3 to 4 hours a day. Should I bother replacing the fan or buy a new laptop?
Specs
Toshiba L305-S5968
Intel Pentium T4200
3 GB Memory
320 GB HD
Vista Home Premium
Specs
Toshiba L305-S5968
Intel Pentium T4200
3 GB Memory
320 GB HD
Vista Home Premium
- RaisinCain
- Posts: 1941
- Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2009 7:11 pm
Searched out a couple places to see how to replace the fan....Yes, pain in the ass. Got to the part where I had the keyboard off, but could not seem to get any further then that..RaisinCain wrote:I'd say replace it but it's going to be a pain in the ass. If you decide to, I would try and get the field manual so that you know the steps.
If you do go for it keep track of what screws came out of what hole. Sometimes they are different lengths and if you put a long screw in where a short one came out bad things can happen. Also if you have to remove the heatsink, and if it uses thermal pads, you don't want to damage one if you don't have any spares. If you have to remove the bottom case/cover, watch out for screws hidden under the rubber feet or under the labels/stickers. I've disassembled a Dell laptop and it was an adventure and a good learning experience.
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
- YARDofSTUF
- Posts: 70006
- Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2000 12:00 am
- Location: USA
As long as your temps are good.
If you dont know your temps, use this:
http://www.piriform.com/speccy
If you dont know your temps, use this:
http://www.piriform.com/speccy
Sweet, what is the acceptable temp range? I didn't try the program yet, but have used it in the past.YARDofSTUF wrote:As long as your temps are good.
If you dont know your temps, use this:
http://www.piriform.com/speccy
One of those laptop cooling pads with the fans in it might help? Does the fan turn at all? Does it spin freely? Sometimes you can peel the label back and see the bearings. If so a drop or two of light oil will sometimes get it spinning freely again. It doesn't always work but its simple enough to try. If you are careful peeling the label back and don't rip it you just press it back in place after to keep the dust out.
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
Summary
Operating System
MS Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP2
CPU
Intel Pentium T4200 @ 2.00GHz 106 °F
Penryn 45nm Technology
RAM
3.00 GB Dual-Channel DDR2 @ 398MHz (6-6-6-18)
Motherboard
TOSHIBA Portable PC (CPU) 124 °F
Graphics
LP154WX4-TLCC (1280x800@60Hz)
Mobile Intel(R) 4 Series Express Chipset Family
Mobile Intel(R) 4 Series Express Chipset Family
Hard Drives
313GB Western Digital WDC WD3200BEVS-26VAT0 (SATA) 85 °F
Optical Drives
TSSTcorp CDDVDW TS-L633A
Audio
Realtek High Definition Audio
Operating System
MS Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP2
CPU
Intel Pentium T4200 @ 2.00GHz 106 °F
Penryn 45nm Technology
RAM
3.00 GB Dual-Channel DDR2 @ 398MHz (6-6-6-18)
Motherboard
TOSHIBA Portable PC (CPU) 124 °F
Graphics
LP154WX4-TLCC (1280x800@60Hz)
Mobile Intel(R) 4 Series Express Chipset Family
Mobile Intel(R) 4 Series Express Chipset Family
Hard Drives
313GB Western Digital WDC WD3200BEVS-26VAT0 (SATA) 85 °F
Optical Drives
TSSTcorp CDDVDW TS-L633A
Audio
Realtek High Definition Audio
It spins on first boot, then stops. I can't access the fan yet, I tried the other day.The Dude wrote:One of those laptop cooling pads with the fans in it might help? Does the fan turn at all? Does it spin freely? Sometimes you can peel the label back and see the bearings. If so a drop or two of light oil will sometimes get it spinning freely again. It doesn't always work but its simple enough to try. If you are careful peeling the label back and don't rip it you just press it back in place after to keep the dust out.
- YARDofSTUF
- Posts: 70006
- Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2000 12:00 am
- Location: USA
If it spins I wouldn't worry about trying to oil the bearings just yet then. I would look for a setting in the BIOS for Fan Speed or something similar. If there is an "always on" option I would try that to see what happens. There may also be software installed by the manufacturer to control it. My ASUS motherboards have a Cool & Quiet option for CPU fan speed control.
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
Will check. I'm thinking this problem just started recently. I'm sure I would have noticed this thing being very warm after using it for a few hours. Doesn't the BIOS usually trigger an alarm when the temps get high?The Dude wrote:If it spins I wouldn't worry about trying to oil the bearings just yet then. I would look for a setting in the BIOS for Fan Speed or something similar. If there is an "always on" option I would try that to see what happens. There may also be software installed by the manufacturer to control it. My ASUS motherboards have a Cool & Quiet option for CPU fan speed control.
- YARDofSTUF
- Posts: 70006
- Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2000 12:00 am
- Location: USA
Like Yardofstuff said, it depends on how hot its getting and what temp threshold the BIOS is set to. The setting he's talking about I've seen on a lot of desktop PC's. Laptops likely have that setting too, but the setting I'm talking about is separate from that. On a laptop, if the CPU isn't doing much and isn't hot, the fan will slow down or even stop to save battery power. As it heats up the fan speeds up. The same thing happens on my two ASUS desktop motherboards but its to reduce noise, as there is no battery. Usually you have the option to set the fan to always on. It will run at full speed regardless. Its a good way to see if its actually working correctly without waiting for things to heat up. Or overheat if it never turns on.CableDude wrote:Will check. I'm thinking this problem just started recently. I'm sure I would have noticed this thing being very warm after using it for a few hours. Doesn't the BIOS usually trigger an alarm when the temps get high?
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
- YeOldeStonecat
- SG VIP
- Posts: 51171
- Joined: Mon Jan 15, 2001 12:00 pm
- Location: Somewhere along the shoreline in New England
The few laptops I've worked on were pretty sparse as far as BIOS options go. Date, time, boot order, maybe some diagnostics. Most times its a freaking adventure just trying to see what key to press to get in in the first place. If you leave it running does the fan ever start up? They can be pretty quiet at low speed.
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
I do believe most laptops work that way? My old Acer Aspire does basically the same thing. It spins up during boot and then slows down again once Windows loads. It will go on and off depending on how hot the laptop gets. You may find that even though you can't hear it, its still on, just at low speed.
I don't know the same things you don't know. 
I guess I never realized that.The Dude wrote:I do believe most laptops work that way? My old Acer Aspire does basically the same thing. It spins up during boot and then slows down again once Windows loads. It will go on and off depending on how hot the laptop gets. You may find that even though you can't hear it, its still on, just at low speed.