Acer Aspire 3 A314 series., low battery and fan spinning like crazy

mariac483
mariac483 Member Posts: 2 New User
edited October 2022 in Aspire Laptops

Hello to everyone. I recently bought an Acer Aspire 3 A314 series. First time i turn it on i realize the fan sounds like crazy, just by turning it on with no special use more than opening firefox an email.

This keeps happening, it is on 3 minutes and starts making fan noise again. I have to add that this computer is totally new and i got it from the official Acer store on my country.

My second question (and worry) is the battery, my old computer has 6 years old and when is a 100% the battery indicator says "5 hours X minutes". This new computer has literally one week and at 100% says the same 5 hours... with no use more than me opening a web browser and not with the full light on the screen. Is this normal? Because my old computer was a tiny aspire r11 and new lasted like 8h, and now old 5h. This one is new and bigger and has the same battery life than my old pc...

I feel a bit disappointed honestly, does anyone else have these problems?

Thanks

Answers

  • mariac483
    mariac483 Member Posts: 2 New User

    I followed a video that said to enter in Settings, and create a profile and lower the CPU use. I put it on 60% (was at 100% before) thinking it was going to stop the fan.

    Well here i am doing nothing more than checking email and ckecing the forum while the fan is spinning again :')

    Let's add that there's not hot weather where i live (14 C)

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 13,229 Trailblazer
    edited October 2022

    Hi @mariac483

    You may have a battery Smart logic issue. To check out if your fan speed is affected by a bad battery; remove the battery and start your laptop with only your adapter (without battery). If the fan speed sounds/acts normal buy a new battery model fully tested by Acer, Don't experiment with "compatible" batteries. Don't worry about battery life indicated by Windows10/11 just look at the wear level % using HWINFO.exe (freeware) or check the remaining battery life by running an elevated command prompt (run as administrator):

    powercfg /batteryreport /output %USERPROFILE%\Desktop\battery_report.html

    The Battery report will be saved on your desktop and can be viewed with your default browser by double clicking (remaining life is the last line first column "fully charged").