Clean your PC like new without disassembly! [Super-Solution]

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QuentinDark27 Posted messages 16 Registration date   Status Member Last intervention   -  
-L0Lock- Posted messages 8409 Status Member -
Hello,
I'm opening this topic for people who have experienced issues with their laptops such as sudden shutdowns, etc. Unfortunately, this happened to me. I was playing a game on my computer and three minutes later... poof, my laptop shut down abruptly! I’m going to give you the solution to prevent this from happening again!
To do this, buy a COMPUTER AIR DUSTER (you can find it in any store).
Once purchased, spray on all air outlets. Once that’s done, position your laptop backwards and spray where the air comes out (it’s located on the edges) and you’ll see all the dust coming out. =D
Now you can play in complete peace!!!

If the problem persists, try reducing the performance of your laptop by going into your graphics card settings.

If the problem still persists, it means that your motherboard has given up the ghost.

Configuration: Windows 7 / Chrome 47.0.2526.106

1 answer

TikTak92 Posted messages 3334 Status Member 867
 
Hello,

1. The story of the air dust blower..
It's important to know that dust settles between the radiator and the fan, and over time, it forms a fairly rigid dust mat that blocks the hot air being expelled by the fan.
Where it becomes a bad idea to use the air blower is that by spraying this compressed air into the grooves of the radiator, there is a 95% chance of moving the dust mat into the fan, which can eventually block the fan and therefore burn it out..
What is actually recommended is to disassemble the machine to manually clean the heatsink and also take the opportunity to change the thermal paste (dust is not the only culprit of overheating), then after performing this thorough manual cleaning, you can use the air blower about once a month to clear away new dust particles and thus prevent them from forming another complete mat.

2. If the problem persists..
If the overheating issue persists, you will indeed need to consider reducing performance to lessen the load on the chipset and reduce some of the heat emitted. You will also need to check the sensors.

3. If the problem still persists..
The motherboard is not necessarily doomed.. You will need to look into other checks..

--
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QuentinDark27 Posted messages 16 Registration date   Status Member Last intervention   1
 
Yes, it can have a carpet. But the air duster can destroy that famous dust carpet!
I have a laptop full of dust that I hadn't maintained for 3 years!
When I sprayed my laptop with the duster, all the dust came out like magic! I took apart my laptop and saw that everything was clean, and with the duster, my laptop looked like it was brand new!
Thanks to this duster, now I can play peacefully without my laptop shutting down by itself!!!
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TikTak92 Posted messages 3334 Status Member 867 > QuentinDark27 Posted messages 16 Registration date   Status Member Last intervention  
 
No, the bomb doesn't destroy the carpet of dust, it moves it.
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QuentinDark27 Posted messages 16 Registration date   Status Member Last intervention   1
 
Thank you, I used the duster can and there was no more dust carpet!
PS: It's a duster can, not a dry air can. The duster can contains an additional product that helps destroy the carpet.
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-L0Lock- Posted messages 8409 Status Member 1 188 > QuentinDark27 Posted messages 16 Registration date   Status Member Last intervention  
 
Dude... From the moment you blow air into the PC, you're only pushing the dust deeper into it... It's simply a question of physics, and no word about your air canister changes that. At best, your duster broke the dust up into pieces and managed to remove some of it; at worst (and this is the most plausible), it allowed the dust to go further inside the machine by fragmenting it. In any case, the layer of dust is at least partially pushed further into your PC.

When cleaning a PC, you need to remove the dust, not lift it or, even less, blow it inside.
When dusting by hand, you need to take care to collect the dust to remove it or at least make it fall outside the PC.
When using air machines (whether it's air canisters, compressors, special vacuums, or others), you should always direct the airflow out of the PC, otherwise you’re only scattering the dust inside and especially pushing it into the hardest-to-clean corners.
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