Omnimaga

General Discussion => Technology and Development => Computer Usage and Setup Help => Topic started by: squidgetx on August 19, 2010, 05:51:10 pm

Title: computer issues
Post by: squidgetx on August 19, 2010, 05:51:10 pm
Ok, my computer as of late has been acting extremely odd and I was wondering if I oculd maybe get some help here...

At random times it emits a beeping noise, then turns off. The screen simply goes black. Upon turning it on again, Windows tells me that it was shut down incorrectly, etc.

I would first suspect overheating,and then a faulty power supply or weary heatsink. However, this computer is less than 8 months old. And it's a laptop (which I would expect that all of its parts

Specs: HP Pavilion Dv7-3000 laptop
4 gb ram
nvidia geforce 1 gb
intel i7 1.6ghz

ummm can't think of any other things that would be important right now....would a company really build a laptop with a faulty PSU? bah idk what to do...
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: willrandship on August 19, 2010, 07:13:43 pm
hrmm...beeping right at the start? That means a hardware malfunction of some kind. It could be an overheat warning (last time the computer shut down due to overheat) could be display malfunction, keyboard error, many things. Is it still under warranty? You might try for a repair, but make sure you back up your stuff first.
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: squidgetx on August 19, 2010, 07:45:48 pm
well it beeps once right before it turns off

edit: installed speedfan to monitor temp's

GPU is around 92 as i am typing this with no other programs running, 1600/900 display, most of win7's glitter on (glass in the taskbar, etc.)
Gets up close 110 while playing a game (AoE3) at medium graphics settings

CPU is around high 40s low 50s as i type this
Gets up to the low 60s while playing my game

while watching a vid on youtube the gpu gets up to high 90s, 100 ish, cpu is around 55 or 54

That's overheating, isn't it?
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: willrandship on August 19, 2010, 10:15:46 pm
if it's celsius, then definitely for the gpu. CPU seems fine though. 60 C isn't unreasonable, and 60 F is fantastic.

Beeping when it turns off isn't beep codes (for overheating and such) those only happen when you turn a computer on
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: squidgetx on August 20, 2010, 10:11:03 am
yes, i am in celsius.
i think it might also have to do with long term use of the computer; like if it's on all day. I just turned it on and the gpu is in the low 70s, and most of the cpu is below 40
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: ztrumpet on August 20, 2010, 11:34:00 am
Wow, that's hot.  My guess is that the GPU's overheating.   Good luck squidgetx. :)
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: smmagic on August 20, 2010, 11:37:40 am
GPU is defo overheating there, not sure what you can do about that on a lappy, underclock it in the mean time
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: squidgetx on August 20, 2010, 05:42:56 pm
bah thanks...hp told me to update my drivers...(didn't work)

How can you underclock the gpu?
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: Builderboy on August 20, 2010, 05:48:26 pm
Yikes, sounds no good D: Is your fan working?  Thats the extent of my hardware advice! ;D I hope you can fix it!
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: DJ Omnimaga on August 22, 2010, 03:43:27 pm
Darn, in any case, backup your important stuff! But I still hope your computer is fine or that it can be fixed so you don't need a new one.
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: Geekboy1011 on August 22, 2010, 04:44:21 pm
if its a ati gpu it would be in the catalyst settings not to sure for nvidia

and it sounds like it may be overvolted or a bad psu

you sould try speed fan guess it will tell you the temos and you can turn the fans up fully and see if it stays really hot or if there on at all
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: squidgetx on August 22, 2010, 09:36:39 pm
well hp told me to completely system restore my computer

i did it just so they don't bother me when i send this thing in to their mailin repair

hopefully they can actually fix it (bad psu maybe...or fan is messed up...idk).

so i guess i could be offline for a little bit over the next 2 weeks.
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: DJ Omnimaga on August 23, 2010, 12:37:03 am
ouch, well good luck :/
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: wchill on August 23, 2010, 12:45:47 am
Dust? Dust could screw with the fans and make your GPU/CPU run hotte.r
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: Myntal on August 23, 2010, 10:19:47 am
Wait, check you're motherboards capacitors. One time I had one blow and it did the exact same thing. Unfortunatley if this happens you're computer will need a new motherboard, but there is a chance you could fix it. Just check it out.
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: matthias1992 on August 23, 2010, 10:57:42 am
well hp told me to completely system restore my computer

i did it just so they don't bother me when i send this thing in to their mailin repair

hopefully they can actually fix it (bad psu maybe...or fan is messed up...idk).

so i guess i could be offline for a little bit over the next 2 weeks.
Good to turn it in to them, altough messing with it yourself is often no problem for smaller issues this should be done professional. I do recommend turning some of Windows 7 stylish stuff off, definetely when playing games. When you get it back run msconfig.exe just by typing it in the search bar at the start button. Here you can manually decide which processes you want to boot. The more you shut down the faster you will boot and you will put less drain on both your CPU as well as your GPU. Be sure to know what you are turning off however! Also take a look at how many processes you ahve running in the taskbar 60-70 is normal and unoptimzed, around 40-55 is pretty optimized.

These are just some general tips to get your computer faster and cooler.

One more thing to prevent overheating is not to have it constantly on the adapter, this causes quite some heat to sort of flow in the laptop. 
if you still ahve trouble with heat you can always buy a standard with a fan on it.

I still beat you though with 120 celsius GPU because I had the fan turned off whilst playing CoD x.x It survived though :).
Title: Re: computer issues
Post by: wchill on August 23, 2010, 03:15:39 pm
I have to add, unplugging your laptop when it's at 100% will help your battery. If left constantly plugged in, the battery loses an average of 20% capacity per year, or so I've heard.