Fan Holes Blocked

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Napoleon
Napoleon Member Posts: 1 New User

Hello,

The fan ventilation circle beneath my Aspire 5536 laptop is solid (no holes). Is this correct?

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  • Tommy-Acer
    Tommy-Acer VIP Posts: 6,317 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
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    I don't show a circle ventilation area on the bottom of the Aspire 5536. 

    I do see a square area for ventilation on the bottom of the computer at the rear of the unit, relatively close to the battery compartment.

     

  • lunghd
    lunghd Member Posts: 3 New User
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    If yours is like mine, Acer did not open the cooling fan intake port on the bottom!

     

    The fan is inside but is merrily pushing hot air around inside the case! On mine, and others who have reported the same issue online, the intake vent holes on the bottom were not cut open from the factory.You can see the embossed square with the circular impression where an opening should be.

     

    The solution is to disassemble the laptop (a pain but I'll give you a link to disassembly) and use a Dremel tool to cut open the slots. You'll get an instant improvement in cooling and hopefully cosmic karma will cause someone at the Acer factory to stub their toe.

     

    Disassembly video here: http://dablog.silkenhut.com/acer-aspire-5536-zerlegen-mainboard-disassembly-guide-repair-video/comment-page-2/#comment-47312

     

    Here is a thread about this at MajorGeeks, which is where I was clued in to take a closer look at my cooling port... my, um, realistic looking factory faked port. http://forums.majorgeeks.com/showthread.php?t=230056

  • lunghd
    lunghd Member Posts: 3 New User
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    Tommy - you see a square area for ventilation... but do you see any HOLES FOR AIR INTAKE there? The fan can't suck air through plastic! It fooled me - I've had this laptop for well over a year and just found out this week that the vent is a fake. Someone dropped the ball at Acer on this one - all the cooling fan does with that port blocked is recirculate hot air until it overheats and shuts down. (Which was my problem.)

     

    I very carefully drilled some temporary holes (by setting drill depth so it could just barely punch through plastic) and when I fired up the computer again it instantly began cooling down from prevous levels as measured by SpeedFan.

     

    Now I will have to disassemble the laptop and cut the slots open entirely... a job that the factory seems to have skipped.

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