Remember that I had the notebook in a room that never had an air temperature over, say, 26 ☌.Ĭan damage? Yes. Highest temperature recommended was circa 70 ☌Ĭonclusion: My seven days 100% CPU burn-in did not create a high temperature in the SSD, and it kept very good margin to the given max. Highest temperature recorded ever was around 42 ☌ I took a look at the SSD using some diagnostics software. "This notebook is not suitable for 3D rendering." LOL!!! But really, if one can't use a new notebook at 100% CPU for some days, I really would like to see some disclaimers from computer manufacturers, or some kind of admissions from them, that this is the case. I can accept that some people are skeptical about my worries about "toxic fumes" you want to see proof. Shouldn't notebooks be used for those things? What if you have some encoding work to do? Or some 3D-rendering work? Those can easily run for three days, 100% CPU load. Many say that this seven days 100% CPU load will be damaging (/wear out early) to the computer.įrom my computing background (1990- ) this sounds really strange - though I'm not saying it is wrong. How would you do a "burn-in" of a notebook? I guess one could put a fan next to it, but then the temperature would not get that high, and huge part of the reason for burn-in would disappear.īut reading them, I really wonder where "computing" is today. So, can a seven days full 100% CPU load "burn-in" / "stress test" damage a modern notebook? The notebook is of a model that doesn't get that very hot.īut after some weeks the hardware seems to "give up", recently the SSD has started to act up. It went fine and didn't crash the OS even once. So I did a burn-in for a new notebook recently. I guess a server surely is, but is a notebook? I'm talking one from a "well" known brand as Apple, Lenovo, HP, ASUS, Dell, etc. Let it "steam out" some of the "plastic/chemical gasses" before I use it in my homeīut, now I'm wondering, am I creating hardware problems by doing this? Are modern notebooks built to withstand this? When I buy new computers, I usually do a "burn-in" with 100% CPU load for, say, seven days, in a well ventilated place.įind out if the computer has problems before I invest time into setting it up for me
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