JP Vossen on 2 Dec 2015 07:39:43 -0800 |
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Re: [PLUG] fans |
Short version: 1) Clean it out with compressed air, etc 2) Re-seat the fan & connectors 3) Possibly hit the fan with WD-40 Long version: I had a similar problem recently on a System76 Pangolin laptop running Mint 17. It was not complaining about the fan sensor, it was just that the fan was revving up too often and was much too loud. I was very pleasantly surprised to find out that on this laptop the fan is attached to a "trap-door" panel held on by 3 screws and was insanely easy to pop right off and clean. So I first recommend taking a look at that and just blasting out all the built up dust and re-seating the connector(s). Some may disagree with this, but I also hit the fan motor/bearing with a couple of good squirts of WD-40. For me, that seems to flush out more dust and loosen things up again. I did it over the garbage can, and blotted up as much as I could before reinstalling it, for hopefully obvious reasons. :-) That all helped but did not fix the problem, so I started hunting. It turns out that somehow it was using the Nouveau driver which (I think) was causing the graphics card not to idle. I'm not sure if this laptop was always using that driver or if it somehow switched, but I am sure that: a) switching from nouveau (1:1.0.10-1ubuntu-2) to nvidia-340 (340.96-0ubuntu0.14.04.1) solved the fan too often/too loud problem and that b) that fan problem has only been happening for a few months and that it got much worse in the last week. On 12/02/2015 07:36 AM, Rich Mingin (PLUG) wrote: > So for some elaboration/reassurance, its likely the fan itself is > mechanically fine, its the rpm sensing that is failing. This matches up > with the rpm sawtooth pattern, the warning on startup, and clearing on a > full power cycle. While there is a small possibility that it's the > system hardware controller failing and not the fan/sensor/wire, I always > blame the 5-20$ parts for failing before worrying about the 200-500$ ones. > > Let me know how it goes. > > On Dec 2, 2015 12:21 AM, "jeff" <jeffv@op.net <mailto:jeffv@op.net>> wrote: > > I'm good, thanks! > Had to replace the kbd already, which was surprisingly easy. Just > hoping it's only the fan. > > > On 12/02/2015 12:13 AM, Rich Mingin (PLUG) wrote: > > It's a simple enough repair, I've done it on a few different models, > 15-20 minutes if you take your time and do it right. Need > assistance or > support? > > On Dec 2, 2015 00:01, "jeff" <jeffv@op.net <mailto:jeffv@op.net> > <mailto:jeffv@op.net <mailto:jeffv@op.net>>> wrote: > > My laptop's fan started making revving noises yesterday. > Today when > booted, I got a BIOS warning about not being able to detect > the fan. > Rebooting fixed it. > > I'm looking for somebody to tell me it's simply a > replacement fan fix. > The fan is attached to a long cooling heatsink, complete with a > copper tube. The fan is sold by itself or with the entire > assembly. > > HP Elitebook 8760w running Xubuntu (for topicality). > > > http://www.ebay.com/itm/HP-EliteBook-8760w-Cooling-Heatsink-and-Fan-652543-001-/221895023619?hash=item33a9f95c03:g:DaYAAOSwFnFWA~wB > > > Thanks for the benefit of your experience. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------- JP Vossen, CISSP | http://www.jpsdomain.org/ | http://bashcookbook.com/ ___________________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group -- http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion -- http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug