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may be from the room being too hot. I was unable to afford air conditioning and it was around 85 to 90 degrees in my house.

Do you think this explanation is plausible? My son--who is a computer expert--built it-- but it broke..he then had to replace the motherboard and something else but 3 minutes after he claimed it was fixed, it broke again saying it was missing a file..been waiting impatiently a month for him to look at it, but he is too busy he claims..so frustrating..only worked one of 5 months--constant problems and I am wondering if the heat may, in fact, be a factor. Thanks.

2006-07-10 13:58:23 · 8 answers · asked by janie 7 in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

The first time it broke I was in the process of doing a ad-adware and it was showing spyware (43) butr before it was done with the scan and I could take these off, the screen went blank. The computer would not turn on (the light stayed off).

Son replaced the motherboard and another part and said he thought it was fixed.

Turned on worked three minutes and then a screen came on saying file # such and such was corrupted or missing and to put in initial rebooting cd-rom and go to screen so and so to try to fix.

Computor will not shut off unless I unplug it. Son said it may need this part he has (but has not looked at it yet --one month ago it broke) and now talking of having to buy me a new one. Everyone's (both sons) mad at me and don't know how long it will take for them to afford one (I am disabled and on a small fixed income).

They said they thought the heat might have blown the motherboard.

2006-07-11 13:37:32 · update #1

The first time it broke I was in the process of doing a ad-adware and it was showing spyware (43) but before it was done with the scan and I could take these off, the screen went blank.

The computer would not turn on (the light stayed off).

Son replaced the motherboard and another part and said he thought it was fixed.

Turned on worked three minutes and then a screen came on saying file # such and such was corrupted or missing and to put in initial rebooting cd-rom and go to screen so and so to try to fix.

Computor will not shut off unless I unplug it. Son said it may need this part he has (but has not looked at it yet --one month ago it broke) and now talking of having to buy me a new one. Everyone's (both sons) mad at me and don't know how long it will take for them to afford one (I am disabled and on a small fixed income).

They said they thought the heat might have blown the motherboard, and I was wondering if this was a factor.

2006-07-11 13:38:53 · update #2

8 answers

Heat will definitely shorten the life span of the computer but in this case, it depends on:

1) Usage time while it was working/day (and frequencies)
2) Computer was in a vented location and not inside a cupboard or something
3) How many fans are being utilized

In my gut feeling is that 5 months will not kill your computer because processor could reach 50-60 degree celsius. I had Dell Optiplex running inside a cupboard (without ventiliation) and last over 2 yrs without issue (though the client was told it will shorten the life span of the computer)

Missing files are not usually generated after 3 mins into boot unless the OS files are corrupt (or missing as stated).

I doubt it is a FAN issue especially if you could get the computer to just boot without issue. Power Monitoring could be a good reason in the computer BIOS (ESC, F1, F12, F6, or Delete button is pressed just after Computer boots)

2006-07-10 14:04:49 · answer #1 · answered by dbrhee 4 · 0 0

In truth, yes, but not from what it sounds like. Heat can be a major factor of frying a mother-board which your son obviously thought was the initial problem. From what it seems, he was wrong.
IMO, the standing problem may be that your son doesn't know what is wrong with your computer. Shiriking his duty to his mother. What COULD be wrong is that you have to many viruses or even a worm, which are well known to eat through your computer. My recomendation is this: Get your recovery CD. If one didn't come with your computer, get a friends. Back-up your files ( through burning to a disk, or if not possible, the VERY slow process of mailing them to yourself), and finally using the recovery disk to get your computer up to speed. Remember: The safest thing you can do is use a recovery disc that contains the same OS you have, such as windows XP, 2000, Mac x.x, or whatever it may be. IF your computer still doesn't work properly, (or if you can't even turn it on) bring it to a CERTIFIED computer repairman, as it may be something with your hardware.

2006-07-10 14:06:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It seems as if the heat in your case really isn't the problem... The Processor Chip on motherboards are the main chip which might overheat... but for a processor chip to overheat it has to reach temperatures of well over 95 degrees. Intel processors have an onboard fan which keeps the chip cool, and most processors have mechanisms that automatically shut the chip down/ off if it reaches temperatures that might harm it. It seems as if you have more problems then just heat with your computer.

2006-07-10 14:04:55 · answer #3 · answered by rachelle105210 5 · 0 0

if the room is ok for you to sit and compute... it should not be a problem for the computer... unless... your processor is being run overspeed, (if your are using an AMD chipset this is a possibility)... then you need to make sure your motherboard has fans on the processor chip(s)...

another cause.. if the cooling fan has quit... or... you have stuff stacked up around the computer case so that it cannot get good air-flow... there can be a lot of factors.. it could even be that your son touched something that was sensitive to static electricity (these things usually take a little while to fail) without being properly grounded himself.

2006-07-10 14:04:54 · answer #4 · answered by ♥Tom♥ 6 · 0 0

your room being 85 to 90 degrees Farenheit wouldn't effect your computer in any way
It won't effect it until it reachs about 170 to 180 and from there, it will take it about half a year of a constant 180 degrees to totaly fry taht computer. And that is if your computer sucks in air
If you room were to be 180 degrees, well your new airconditioner IS your computer
the air is blows out is about 70 to 80 degrees maybe even 90, but that temperature shouldn't effect any computer at all, it may just run a little hot

2006-07-10 14:03:55 · answer #5 · answered by Eng 5 · 0 0

If a file goes missing this has nothing to do with the temperature in the room but a normal computer usually generates between 120-130 degrees Fahrenheit under load.

2006-07-10 14:03:00 · answer #6 · answered by VzjrZ 5 · 0 0

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2016-10-14 08:11:18 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes heat can effect your comp, my server melted not too long ago., the intenal heat of your comp is on avg 15 degrees hottoer then your room temp, my server started melting when the internal temp breached 105....

2006-07-10 14:04:47 · answer #8 · answered by brett_day2002 3 · 0 0

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