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crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Colton Turner

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I have not done this, but I have repasted multiple devices around the house, I could not find a teardown guide for your laptop but here or some good noted for Liquid Metal repastes that I have found on the internet:
# You need a few tools and supplies, including liquid metal thermal compound, isopropyl alcohol, thermal pads, thermal paste removal tool
# Clean, and empty your workspace to avoid debris and dust getting in your system
# Remove the old thermal paste
# I saw something about applying thermal pads but I have no clue why you need to do that
# To apply, squeeze a small amount of liquid metal onto the center of the CPU. Use a toothpick or a clean and lint-free cloth to spread the liquid metal in a thin and even layer and check that the liquid metal covers the entire surface of the CPU
# I would give the inside of your device a dusting with canned air
# Close the laptops case together, do what you want but I would test if it turned on and ***then*** screw it all together
# Test the thermal output
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-If your still getting the same heat output, you heatsink, or fans might be bad. Hope this helps also sorry if I made any grammatical mistakes good luck!
+If your still getting the same heat output, you heatsink, or fans might be bad. Hope this helps also sorry if I made any grammatical mistakes, and good luck with your repair!

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crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Colton Turner

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

I have not done this, but I have repasted multiple devices around the house, I could not find a teardown guide for your laptop but here or some good noted for Liquid Metal repastes that I have found on the internet:

# You need a few tools and supplies, including liquid metal thermal compound, isopropyl alcohol, thermal pads, thermal paste removal tool
# Clean, and empty your workspace to avoid debris and dust getting in your system
# Remove the old thermal paste
# I saw something about applying thermal pads but I have no clue why you need to do that
# To apply, squeeze a small amount of liquid metal onto the center of the CPU. Use a toothpick or a clean and lint-free cloth to spread the liquid metal in a thin and even layer and check that the liquid metal covers the entire surface of the CPU
# I would give the inside of your device a dusting with canned air
# Close the laptops case together, do what you want but I would test if it turned on and ***then*** screw it all together
# Test the thermal output

If your still getting the same heat output, you heatsink, or fans might be bad. Hope this helps also sorry if I made any grammatical mistakes good luck!

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