What is considered a safe temperature for a laptop CPU? Aspire 3 A315-57G-59HR

ClarRence
ClarRence Member Posts: 13

Tinkerer

My cpu temp is around 60C-70C while browsing the web, should I be concerned about this? I bought my laptop last month, been using daily for my online classes and homeworks so it should be 7-9 hours of average use. I also play heavy games on it but never played this week but the cpu's temp is still around 60-70C. I can provide more details if possible, thanks in advance!


Best Answer

  • Jason_Bourne
    Jason_Bourne Member Posts: 113 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    ClarRence said:
    ClarRence said:
    Im using a makeshift laptop mat made of egg cartons. It's unlikely because I rarely work off the table so all those temperatures are taken while it is placed on the egg carton mat. Do you have any suggestion to make the laptop "cooler"? Thanks again for taking your time to answer my question
    I tried matching your CPU utilizations and almost hit 60°C at 28%, 76°C at 82%. Ambient temperature is 29°C right now.



    Maybe 10th gen i5 CPUs run inherently hotter than 8th gen ones? Your laptop is too new to have an issue with the cooling system and it sounds like you're not blocking any air vents. What's your ambient temperature?
    Ambient temperature here is around 27°C to 32°C, but since its rainy, I guess around 27°C or so. I also forgot that I took the temperature while the laptop is charging so I tried taking a temperature check again after about 8-10 minutes unplugging it and here is the result

    Seems like it was hotter than usual because I was charging it. But still, it is a tad hotter compared to yours, which I am little concerned about. Does it have to do with the programs I installed? Should I consider refreshing my laptop? I have a backup and all. Let me know your thoughts. Thankyou again for your time.
    Ah, mine's used plugged in all the time. The temps were taken while the battery was 100% and and the laptop plugged in... so it wasn't charging I guess, but running directly from the AC supply. Maybe that makes a difference?

    But, plugged in or not, I've never seen my CPU reach 95°C since I bought it back in 2018. Once I managed to hit 90°C running NFS Rivals, but the average temperature doesn't rise above 75°C - 80°C even when running games like Rivals, SIMS, CIV, Stellaris for hours (I have an external display so I can monitor my temperatures while I'm gaming)

    But don't forget your CPU is two generations newer than mine. Maybe the temperatures you're experiencing are normal for your model (Mine's a E5-576G) as long as you don't experience frequent thermal throttling (thermal throttling occurs at 100°C) your CPU should be safe. 

    If I were you I'd use the laptop in a well ventilated room and make sure the air vents aren't covered when I'm gaming, and keep the laptop dust-free as much as possible. No point in messing with the cooling system of a month-old laptop. Apart from replacing the fan after 2 years of use, my cooling system is still factory-spec.


Answers

  • Jason_Bourne
    Jason_Bourne Member Posts: 113 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    edited December 2020
    That's somewhat on the high side compared to my 8250U



    But I don't think you're exceeding what's considered a safe temperature for a CPU, then again the machine is running hotter than usual it seems. Are you using it on a bed or somewhere which limits air circulation inside the laptop?

  • ClarRence
    ClarRence Member Posts: 13

    Tinkerer

    Im using a makeshift laptop mat made of egg cartons. It's unlikely because I rarely work off the table so all those temperatures are taken while it is placed on the egg carton mat. Do you have any suggestion to make the laptop "cooler"? Thanks again for taking your time to answer my question
  • Jason_Bourne
    Jason_Bourne Member Posts: 113 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    ClarRence said:
    Im using a makeshift laptop mat made of egg cartons. It's unlikely because I rarely work off the table so all those temperatures are taken while it is placed on the egg carton mat. Do you have any suggestion to make the laptop "cooler"? Thanks again for taking your time to answer my question
    I tried matching your CPU utilizations and almost hit 60°C at 28%, 76°C at 82%. Ambient temperature is 29°C right now.



    Maybe 10th gen i5 CPUs run inherently hotter than 8th gen ones? Your laptop is too new to have an issue with the cooling system and it sounds like you're not blocking any air vents. What's your ambient temperature?
  • ClarRence
    ClarRence Member Posts: 13

    Tinkerer

    ClarRence said:
    Im using a makeshift laptop mat made of egg cartons. It's unlikely because I rarely work off the table so all those temperatures are taken while it is placed on the egg carton mat. Do you have any suggestion to make the laptop "cooler"? Thanks again for taking your time to answer my question
    I tried matching your CPU utilizations and almost hit 60°C at 28%, 76°C at 82%. Ambient temperature is 29°C right now.



    Maybe 10th gen i5 CPUs run inherently hotter than 8th gen ones? Your laptop is too new to have an issue with the cooling system and it sounds like you're not blocking any air vents. What's your ambient temperature?
    Ambient temperature here is around 27°C to 32°C, but since its rainy, I guess around 27°C or so. I also forgot that I took the temperature while the laptop is charging so I tried taking a temperature check again after about 8-10 minutes unplugging it and here is the result

    Seems like it was hotter than usual because I was charging it. But still, it is a tad hotter compared to yours, which I am little concerned about. Does it have to do with the programs I installed? Should I consider refreshing my laptop? I have a backup and all. Let me know your thoughts. Thankyou again for your time.
  • Jason_Bourne
    Jason_Bourne Member Posts: 113 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    ClarRence said:
    ClarRence said:
    Im using a makeshift laptop mat made of egg cartons. It's unlikely because I rarely work off the table so all those temperatures are taken while it is placed on the egg carton mat. Do you have any suggestion to make the laptop "cooler"? Thanks again for taking your time to answer my question
    I tried matching your CPU utilizations and almost hit 60°C at 28%, 76°C at 82%. Ambient temperature is 29°C right now.



    Maybe 10th gen i5 CPUs run inherently hotter than 8th gen ones? Your laptop is too new to have an issue with the cooling system and it sounds like you're not blocking any air vents. What's your ambient temperature?
    Ambient temperature here is around 27°C to 32°C, but since its rainy, I guess around 27°C or so. I also forgot that I took the temperature while the laptop is charging so I tried taking a temperature check again after about 8-10 minutes unplugging it and here is the result

    Seems like it was hotter than usual because I was charging it. But still, it is a tad hotter compared to yours, which I am little concerned about. Does it have to do with the programs I installed? Should I consider refreshing my laptop? I have a backup and all. Let me know your thoughts. Thankyou again for your time.
    Ah, mine's used plugged in all the time. The temps were taken while the battery was 100% and and the laptop plugged in... so it wasn't charging I guess, but running directly from the AC supply. Maybe that makes a difference?

    But, plugged in or not, I've never seen my CPU reach 95°C since I bought it back in 2018. Once I managed to hit 90°C running NFS Rivals, but the average temperature doesn't rise above 75°C - 80°C even when running games like Rivals, SIMS, CIV, Stellaris for hours (I have an external display so I can monitor my temperatures while I'm gaming)

    But don't forget your CPU is two generations newer than mine. Maybe the temperatures you're experiencing are normal for your model (Mine's a E5-576G) as long as you don't experience frequent thermal throttling (thermal throttling occurs at 100°C) your CPU should be safe. 

    If I were you I'd use the laptop in a well ventilated room and make sure the air vents aren't covered when I'm gaming, and keep the laptop dust-free as much as possible. No point in messing with the cooling system of a month-old laptop. Apart from replacing the fan after 2 years of use, my cooling system is still factory-spec.


  • ClarRence
    ClarRence Member Posts: 13

    Tinkerer

    I see, I probably think it has something to do with the cpu generation also. I also think the background applications have something to do with the somewhat invisible cpu usage (which contributes to the temp). Thank you for your informative answers to my questions! And thank you for your patience in explaining everything the best you can. I truly appreciate it. Have a nice day!
  • petkov70
    petkov70 Member Posts: 1 New User
    Neither the background processes, nor the load and the temperature in the room is a problem with the high temperature of the model and the construction of the cooling. The air outlet is almost completely obscured by the display and the air vents are very low. raise the rear ends of the lattpa by 5 mm and the temperature will drop by 10 degrees just from that! If you uninstall the discrete video card and stay on the built-in graphics, the temperature in games drops even more! Incorrect constructive solution in my opinion! For passive cooling it is like with a Pentium silver, but with active cooling with an i3 processor in a discrete video card, such an engineering solution is simply unacceptable !!!