(02-06-2016, 08:37 AM)NaturalViolence Wrote: [ -> ]PM or email your resume and I'll see what I can do.
Writing is insanely hard for me and I'm having a ton of stress right now from pressure to move out, and I don't have it ready already, so unless I find someone who lets me dictate to them my resume then I don't think I'll be able to until I've settled out of here.
I recently found out, though, that financial assistance for disabled persons is fairly livable in ontario. I'm trying through to get enough in paper before going to my doctor so he's forced to not be useless.
Considering my issues adjusting, I'd need to either work first and then move at least a month later or move first and work at least a month later to prevent a breakdown, and I don't have much time to move out.
EDIT: should note the pressure to move out came right after I posted that post yesterday
(02-06-2016, 12:38 PM)DatKid20 Wrote: [ -> ]This completely fixed it. Thanks dude!
What is your steam/where do you live? Maybe we could play it sometime
I'm trying to fix a friend's computer, he has temp issues, his laptop fan is grinding. We first put in a different fan and there was no more grinding but ran into this strange issue of the fan stopping by itself at certain moments, i installed Realtemp and noticed that at idle, temps were about 50-60, at full load it was 85+, however once it reached 85 and stayed there for about a minute or two, the fan would all of a sudden stop, then start again for like a second, then stop for 2-3 seconds, and it repeats the process like 3-4 times before finally stopping completely, the only way to get the fan working again is to keep blowing into the air vent till the temp drops to like 70 before the fan kicks in again. I'm not sure what causes this, i was thinking it was perhaps the fan but the issue occurs at exactly these particular temps which has me wondering whether it could be a software issue of some sort before splashing cash on another fan. Help!
and the old fan doesn't show the issue at those temps?
if it doesn't, the fan you put in there is defective at high rpm
Maybe the laptop don't provide enough power when the fan tries to go at its highest rpm.
Old fan does same. Anyway to confirm the power issue?
You could buy 5V fan and mod it to use USB power . That way you can use the fan whenever you want . I did that ...
Quote:Maybe the laptop don't provide enough power when the fan tries to go at its highest rpm
That's impossible . Laptop fan uses less than 1W even at maximum speed
I guess either the temp sensor or the controller (mobo) could be the cause
Would the 5v fan be external then? Also if it's a mobo issue, shouldn't a driver upgrade / downgrade fix it, the guy hurriedly upgraded to win 10 from 7, though he didn't have the issue with 10 for about 3 months.
(02-07-2016, 10:45 PM)Zee530 Wrote: [ -> ]Would the 5v fan be external then? Also if it's a mobo issue, shouldn't a driver upgrade / downgrade fix it, Â the guy hurriedly upgraded to win 10 from 7, though he didn't have the issue with 10 for about 3 months.
unlikely OS is the cause. with mobo issue he meant actual hardware issue i think
as in probably the fan controller/power supply is dying.
You can do that with your integrated fan . Most laptop fan should be in this range 5V - 12V . If your fan is 5V , you won't need to buy new one , you will only need an USB cable
As for me , I added 2 external fans to laptop because I want it run as cool as my desktop (82C full load is not good ) . The two fans won't affect the laptop's appearance since no one would look at a laptop's bottom cover anyway . If you do this , you will need 4 feet