SETI + TiBook + no fan = slight problems
I'm stealing this from a thread at the MacNN forums... but since I know none of you would ever go there, I'll post the same here.
Seems a guy left his 550 MHz Ti book crunching SETI all night, and woke up to this:
<a href="http://www.quarkfactor.com/melt.jpg" target="_blank">
</a>
Click thumb for larger image.
Fans are a GOOD thing.
Read the guy's thread in the Mac Addict forums <a href="http://www.macaddict.com/forums/Forum1/HTML/018159.html" target="_blank">here</a>.
Poor bastard.
[ 09-16-2002: Message edited by: murbot ]</p>
Seems a guy left his 550 MHz Ti book crunching SETI all night, and woke up to this:
<a href="http://www.quarkfactor.com/melt.jpg" target="_blank">

Click thumb for larger image.
Fans are a GOOD thing.

Read the guy's thread in the Mac Addict forums <a href="http://www.macaddict.com/forums/Forum1/HTML/018159.html" target="_blank">here</a>.
Poor bastard.
[ 09-16-2002: Message edited by: murbot ]</p>
Comments
i'm sure that did a lot of damage to the internals as well. i wonder if SETI has temp. thresholds like dnet does? if not that would be a nice feature to add.
-alcimedes
I wouldn't exactly call him a moron though, I mean it's not his fault that the fan never came on. Certainly you should be able to use the processor over night regardless what the task it.
Luckily Apple is replacing it (assuming they will replace both the fan and keyboard). You're right, god knows what else melted in there.
I've got a program on my PC notebook that makes the fan come on at certain temperatures that you set. My notebook is never over 40 degrees celsius. I wonder if there is one for OS X out there? I am sure there is.
Any theory that maybe SETI actually reached an intelligent lifeform that just got so excited about seeing a Mac that it overheated?
At first I thought this was another thread like that hard drive thread of yours, murbot. But yeah, that sucks, and it looks like a real flaw in the TiBook's design. I should tell my dad, he has a TiBook 550. But he keeps his on little risers to help the airflow. The fan doesn't come on as often with the risers (actually ankle weights but they do the trick).
I mean, if it's 95 degrees, you don't have air conditioning, and you have your powerbook sitting on a piece of cloth, I could see it getting pretty hot even with the fan running.
it would be a nice feature to had to the machine though, if possible.
<strong>...you don't have air conditioning...</strong><hr></blockquote>
there are still people without a/c? i thot we conquered commonism.
<strong>Actually, it is pretty easy to do heat damage to a PC as well. I destroyed the CD drive on my Dell laptop by installing a program and leaving my dell on my bed. That is all it took to make my CD drive unusable. Still though, that is one SCARY picture.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Uh yeah, putting any running laptop on something that is designed to *insulate* is bad idea!
[ 09-19-2002: Message edited by: klinux ]</p>
Now I'm afraid to leave my iBook on running SETI the whole night.
<strong>You can't blame him if he is telling the truth. </strong><hr></blockquote>
how do you mean that ?
<strong>if I remember correctly, his fan failed.</strong><hr></blockquote>
A fan that runs on at most 12V is suposed to stop this:
[quote]Originally posted by murbot:
<strong>
<a href="http://www.quarkfactor.com/melt.jpg" target="_blank">
</strong><hr></blockquote>
Come on. I think it's fake. When the CPU stops working it stops making heat.
he also said that initially the keys weren't that far apart, but when they cooled they shrunk down and moved.
not sure if i can believe it. seems a bit unlikely to me.
edit: just lifted up the keyboard to my powerbook. not sure how much the design changed between the 550 and the 800, but in my case, the heat would have all been on the top row of keys, the center and lower ones shouldn't have melted at all, as the RAM card is right below there, and wouldn't generate any heat. i can't believe that enough heat would travel through convection in plastic to melt the lower keys.
here's where the heatsink is on the older powerbooks.
[ 09-20-2002: Message edited by: alcimedes ]</p>