cooling - How can I set the laptop fan speed to 100% manually?

07
2014-07
  • Abhishek

    I would like to know if there is a way to set my laptop fan speed to 100%. I want something that I can assign a key to, so when I press combination of keys my fan speed will boost to 100% and pressing them again will reduce it to normal.

    I know the question has been asked before but the solutions recommended aren't exactly what im looking for.

    I know how to set the cooling to active/passive so dont bring that up. Ive used speedfan so ignore that as well. I dont want third part cooling pads or usb fans so dont mention that either. I just want something simple that lets me boost the speed and slow it down after.

  • Answers
  • joao_pimentel

    It seems you need two softwares, one for controlling the fan speed, another for short keys. http://www.almico.com/speedfan.php


  • Related Question

    Can a laptop cooling pad eliminate (or largely substitute) the use of the internal fans?
  • Tom

    I have a laptop with a Core 2 Duo processor and the cooling fans are spinning most of the time. I'd say the computer is silent in 10% of the time and the fans are working in 90% of it.

    I don't have any problems with performance, but I was wondering if employing a laptop pad could drastically cut down on the spinning of the internal fans. I like complete silence, so I'd buy a laptop pad if it could, for example, reverse the above ratio, so the computer would be silent in 90% of the time and the fans would spin only in 10%.

    Is it a realistic expectation when using a good quality cooling pad?


  • Related Answers
  • CarlF

    The cooling pad would be likely to reduce the fan-spinning, but with no air circulating in the tight spaces of a laptop, you can't expect the fans to stay off very long--that Intel chip is generating lots of heat (depending on which one you have, up to 35 watts) and all that energy has to go somewhere. The fans push it out of the case. Conduction with the cooling pad can't cool any part of the laptop except the very bottom, because there isn't room for air to circulate naturally.

  • phoebus

    First, I assume you're referring to a pad with built-in fans, in which case those fans are going to be making noise anyway.

    Second, external fans are nowhere near as thermodynamically efficient as internal ones where a laptop is concerned. If your system is already hot, you're not going to see a 90/10 -> 10/90 reversal.

    If you're talking about a purely heat-conduction-based cooling pad, then this is even more the case, although obviously the first issue won't apply.

  • ioSamurai

    Cooling pads are more for you and your legs than for the internals of the laptop. Unless the cooling from the pad is penetrating enough to lower the temperature sensors inside your computer then it's not going to change the speed of your internal fans.

    The heat is originating inside the machine from the power supply or battery, and you're not likely going to offset this very much by applying cooling externally. If you are in a very hot area where the air is hot, cooling the air in the entire room will likely make more of a difference than applying a cooling pad.

    The closest a cooling pad would come to making a difference would probably be on a model like the MacBook Pro or MacBook Air where the aluminium case is part of the heat dissipation design. Though even then you'll only be able to do so much to pull extra heat off of the metal faster.

    As you can imagine, keeping the laptop on a surface such as legs or a bed or blanket will insulate the device causing air to not flow and increasing heat build up. As you can imagine even placing a solid surface between the laptop and the blanket will improve airflow and cooling, and a cooling pad could be useful here as well.

  • Journeyman Geek

    You need to clean the dust accumulated on the laptop fan(internal). Open up the back of your laptop. Remove the fan(mostly found on the corners), and open internal parts of the fan if you can. You'll find a lot of dust in there. Blow it with a dryer, or use cotton+alcohol. you'll have to clean the air vents in the side of the laptop(looks like grid, its a heat sink). Once all the dust is gone your laptop's cooling system will work efficiently.