Overheating laptop, should I try a lighweight distro - which one?

Hello Penguins,

I’m looking for distro advice. For the last 4-5years I have rocked this laptop, MSI PS63 Modern RC. I have tried Debian, Garuda, Ubuntu, and now currently rocking Tumbleweed. Although I am statisfied with the current choice of distro, my laptop still overheats like crazy whenever its preasured even slightly, for example: doing updates, being on zoom for uni, or ofc low-end gaming.

I realise the laptop is old, but i really want it to last half a year longer before i start working for a company, which then will replace my need for having a personal laptop.

So, should I try a more lightweight distro or do you think the problem lies elsewhere? I’ve had the same issue across all other distros i’ve tried. I’ve looked at trying Alpine and MicroOS from openSUSE.

Appriciate any pointers!

alonely0,

What you need to do is clean the dust off of your fans and ventilation filters (check guides or figure it as you go, but make sure to disconnect the battery and the fans from the mobo as soon as you open it). Then, repaste it with good thermal paste or some liquid metal if you’re feeling confident. I have liquid metal (thermal grizzly condoctonaut) on both of my laptops, and one of them which had overheated since day one, doesn’t anymore.

Irkiosan,

I sounds like you have to apply new cooling paste. This might be a pain to do on a laptop but certainly worth it. Another distro probably won’t do the trick, whether it’s minimal or not.

LunchEnjoyer,
@LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah it seems so, will try to get it done soon 👌

KISSmyOS,

A lightweight distro won’t help you since gaming and zoom will still consume the same amount of resources.
Whatever your distro/DE needs to run itself isn’t even a drop in the ocean compared to your browser for example.

wfh,

I have almost the same laptop (PS63 8M, without any nVidia dGPU).

One of the issues I had to solve was the touchpad spamming interrupts after waking up from sleep. It would keep one core at 100% indefinitely, keeping CPU frequency (and temps) quite high and burning through the battery.

Here’s the fix: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1865745#p1865…

This behavior seems fixed on modern kernels since I’ve installed Fedora recently and didn’t have to do this workaround, but you can still check if this still applies to you.

You might also check if you can disable the dGPU in the BIOS (can’t check since I don’t have one), and/or play with power profiles either through Gnome or tlp (lower power profiles will make your laptop very sluggish though).

Maybe check if both your fans are running. I had to replace one of mine that was starting to fail a year ago.

Other than that, I’ve never had any overheating issues with this laptop.

LunchEnjoyer,
@LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

I will definitely check this out, merci 🌼

wfh,

De rien ;)

mintycactus,
@mintycactus@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • dabaldeagul,
    @dabaldeagul@feddit.nl avatar

    What?

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Uh thanks?

    shalafi,

    Lots of cleaning advice, but let me add this bit: If you crack it open and use a can of air on it, unplug the CPU fan first. Super easy if you’ve gone that far.

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Okidoki 👍

    Dreadnaught,

    And before using a can of fresh air, look into an electronics fan. Compressed air doesn’t actually play nice with electronics

    furycd001,
    @furycd001@lemmy.ml avatar

    The operating system in use shouldn’t be a factor. Consider opening your laptop to perform a thorough cleaning, and also consider replacing the thermal paste as well. If you’re not comfortable doing this yourself, taking it to a repair shop is a viable option. Investing in a cooling stand for the laptop would also be beneficial…

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    I’m alot on the go so don’t think there is a practical enough cooling stand for me, but thanks 🌻

    buzziebee,

    Replacing the thermal paste is essential. It dries out over time and stops conducting heat effectively. Cleaning the fans and radiator fins is important too. Takes an hour or so if you don’t know what you’re doing so shouldn’t take long. I’ve kept my laptop going for years by doing that every 2 years or so.

    furycd001,
    @furycd001@lemmy.ml avatar

    There are some slim battery operated cooling stands listed on Amazon. Not sure how well they’d work, but they are always an option…

    Crozekiel,

    In my experience with them, MSI laptops tend to run quite hot in general, your OS probably isn't going to fix it. You can try one of those laptop cooling plates, basically a mesh platform with fans, ensuring cool air is always available to the laptop intakes, but it isn't exactly a perfect solution.

    Really it just needs more cooling capacity - they seem to cut razor close to the amount needed in their designs so when eventually cooling becomes less efficient either through fans getting tired/clogged or thermal paste/pads breaking down, it will not keep up.

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Yeah it’s a rather thin laptop, but I will open it up and get some cooling paste on it 👍

    Pantherina,
    @Pantherina@feddit.de avatar

    Cant you cramp up the fancourve? Best is in the BIOS as it mostly works best. Also have a look at using liquid metal for cooling, costs nearly nothing. Or simply new good heatpaste, costs like 8€

    rotopenguin,
    @rotopenguin@infosec.pub avatar

    Keep an eye on thermals with s-tui. You could down-throttle the processor with tlp. At some point you’ll probably have to deal with the thermal-transfer pad being bad or whatever, that is never a fun job on a laptop.

    Atemu,
    @Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

    WDYM by “overheat”?

    possiblylinux127,

    Those specs should be fine. Have you tried cleaning it and replacing the thermal paste?

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    I guess not well enough 🫠

    possiblylinux127,

    Honestly sometime devices are prone to overheating just based on design. If you’ve already cleaned it you may also consider under clocking the hardware.

    Your machine is still plenty powerful

    the16bitgamer,

    I have a Gigabyte Clevo thingy, so take what I say with a grain of salt. My laptop has a i5 11 gen intel cup, and it doesn’t have the cooling for my cpu. I don’t know if this is a bug in Linux, or a fault in the pc (probably both). So when I play games it spikes to 80-90C then throttles.

    So what I did was look into software that lets me control the CPU frequency, which led me to Slimbook Battery. This software is amazing and lets me tune the power usage of my cpu to manage the thermals.

    I believe Open Build has a package of Slimbook Battery for Opensuse Tumbleweed, but I’ve had no luck running it. On my Manjaro install it works excellently.

    floofloof,

    A laptop of that age should not have any trouble with the kinds of things you’re doing, so it’s probably more of a hardware issue than a software one, unless some rogue process is eating up your CPU. You probably don’t need a lightweight distro (unless you prefer to keep things extra-light) and if it’s a hardware issue installing one may not help. So, as others have said here, first check the running processes for anything odd, then repaste it and blow out the dust.

    LunchEnjoyer,
    @LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

    Yup thanks will do!

    authed,

    The fan in my Toshiba laptop once died… Make sure that isn’t your problem and replace it if it is

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • [email protected]
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • oklahoma
  • Socialism
  • KbinCafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • KamenRider
  • All magazines