Is it normal for my Acer Aspire E5-575 Laptop to be heating up this much?

AlberichD
AlberichD Member Posts: 4 New User
edited October 2023 in 2020 Archives

I knew this laptop ran hot from how it is configured at stock, but I didn't think it got this hot.
The higher temperature occurs when I am doing light gaming at lowest graphics while the lower, 60 degree temps occur when I am doing little to nothing.
Note:
- I am not overclocking
- I am using original parts and have not tampered with the laptop
- My CPU is an intel core i5-7200U

Best Answer

  • aphanic
    aphanic Member Posts: 959 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    Well... heating up, it could be normal, it depends on many things (assuming there's nothing on the background eating CPU cycles like crazy).

    For example, how long has it been since you have the machine? And since you opened its cover to clean up the fans? They could be filled with dust making them inefficient.

    Another thing would be the thermal compound that the machine has, generally speaking the ones that come with them aren't very efficient either (read: they don't conduce as well as others). And if it's been a while (as in years) it could have dried over time, making it less of good at its job. Maybe the cooling solution for your machine isn't ideal either, but being a 14nm part with a 25W TDP (configurable though) it isn't as bad as older hardware.

    Simple answer: 60º idle, close to Tjunction max. under load isn't usual. You could try opening up the laptop, disconnecting the battery (sane defaults) and removing the fan to clean it up (isopropyl alcohol and a Q-tip is good, even a damp microfiber cloth too).

    If you're at it, you could also check and replace the thermal compound for something else. There are plenty of choices, from the typical Arctic MX-5 to Prolimatech PK-3 and even liquid metal (careful because that's conductive!).

    Both things together should bring things down a notch, I have a (much newer, but still) 14nm processor that idles at 44º C with an environmental temperature of 29º C. It is probably current limited because I can't get it past ~77º C under load, but I've re-pasted already (din't have any lint around in the heatsink or fan still).

    Software wise, there's another option called undervolting in case you want to research that. Basically, you're adjusting the voltage the CPU and/or GPU are able to use by some mV, the processor will run cooler (not as much as the hardware-side changes) and will be able to boost for longer or higher. Intel's XTU may help you in that regard, or Throttlestop. There are guides on how to use both, some quick and some extensive.

    This video for example is both simple and illustrative:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBNP5I2y668

Answers

  • aphanic
    aphanic Member Posts: 959 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    Well... heating up, it could be normal, it depends on many things (assuming there's nothing on the background eating CPU cycles like crazy).

    For example, how long has it been since you have the machine? And since you opened its cover to clean up the fans? They could be filled with dust making them inefficient.

    Another thing would be the thermal compound that the machine has, generally speaking the ones that come with them aren't very efficient either (read: they don't conduce as well as others). And if it's been a while (as in years) it could have dried over time, making it less of good at its job. Maybe the cooling solution for your machine isn't ideal either, but being a 14nm part with a 25W TDP (configurable though) it isn't as bad as older hardware.

    Simple answer: 60º idle, close to Tjunction max. under load isn't usual. You could try opening up the laptop, disconnecting the battery (sane defaults) and removing the fan to clean it up (isopropyl alcohol and a Q-tip is good, even a damp microfiber cloth too).

    If you're at it, you could also check and replace the thermal compound for something else. There are plenty of choices, from the typical Arctic MX-5 to Prolimatech PK-3 and even liquid metal (careful because that's conductive!).

    Both things together should bring things down a notch, I have a (much newer, but still) 14nm processor that idles at 44º C with an environmental temperature of 29º C. It is probably current limited because I can't get it past ~77º C under load, but I've re-pasted already (din't have any lint around in the heatsink or fan still).

    Software wise, there's another option called undervolting in case you want to research that. Basically, you're adjusting the voltage the CPU and/or GPU are able to use by some mV, the processor will run cooler (not as much as the hardware-side changes) and will be able to boost for longer or higher. Intel's XTU may help you in that regard, or Throttlestop. There are guides on how to use both, some quick and some extensive.

    This video for example is both simple and illustrative:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBNP5I2y668