Dear all,
Based on your experience i would like to ask whether is it possible to cool down the chipset on an old toshiba sattelite A300 laptop. I opened it and cleaned the fan and all but still the chipset when in an idle state is around 60 degrees. (Room temperature is around 30-35 degrees).
My question is whether is worthy to give it a try to cool it with coolaboratory liquid pro. I haven't tried applying that thing to a laptop before because i am afraid that when i try to put the chipset's metal cover on top, something might move around and spread the TIM outside of the surface of the cpu or the chipset.
By the way how they designed this laptop is that the cpu gets covered with the metal that ends up to the fan but the chipset is underneath the surface of the board therefore it has a different metal cover which doesn't stick to the fan. It is just spreading the heat throughout the bottom part of the board.
Do you think is worthy of trying to apply on the laptop. Is there some sort of special tape i can tape it around the chipset so that in case the TIM goes out not to touch the motherboard? I would truly appreciate your comments since i am counting on your experience on these subjects.
Regards
George
P.S. something more to mention is that the heat in the laptop is very annoying because especially during noon when is very hot, you can boil an egg on the left side of the laptop
sometimes i feel like i am going to get blisters just by typing 
Based on your experience i would like to ask whether is it possible to cool down the chipset on an old toshiba sattelite A300 laptop. I opened it and cleaned the fan and all but still the chipset when in an idle state is around 60 degrees. (Room temperature is around 30-35 degrees).
My question is whether is worthy to give it a try to cool it with coolaboratory liquid pro. I haven't tried applying that thing to a laptop before because i am afraid that when i try to put the chipset's metal cover on top, something might move around and spread the TIM outside of the surface of the cpu or the chipset.
By the way how they designed this laptop is that the cpu gets covered with the metal that ends up to the fan but the chipset is underneath the surface of the board therefore it has a different metal cover which doesn't stick to the fan. It is just spreading the heat throughout the bottom part of the board.
Do you think is worthy of trying to apply on the laptop. Is there some sort of special tape i can tape it around the chipset so that in case the TIM goes out not to touch the motherboard? I would truly appreciate your comments since i am counting on your experience on these subjects.
Regards
George
P.S. something more to mention is that the heat in the laptop is very annoying because especially during noon when is very hot, you can boil an egg on the left side of the laptop

