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Marvin Goebel Posted on Dec 31, 2013
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Hp pavilion fan noise

Fan just runs and the memory max out.the computer freeze up

1 Answer

Ekse

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  • Master 13,435 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 31, 2013
Ekse
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HI there,

first I would vacuum the case of the computer from dust so that it gets to cool itself properly.

if that doesn't solve the problem, you possibly have too many programs open on the computer, programs can be hidden in the background and use your resources.

Might be best to have the computer restored to factory defaults.

If the problem persists there is most likely a problem with the processor heatsink, might need a little maintenance, cleaning and new thermal paste should do the trick.

but you haven't provided much information, and I have no clue how advanced or how new you are to computers.

I hope it helps.

3 Related Answers

Anonymous

  • 62 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 15, 2007

SOURCE: HP Pavilion s3020n memory upgrade

They are usually in a plastic caady which has a latch on it find the latch and release the caddy hope this helps

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Anonymous

  • 53 Answers
  • Posted on Jun 03, 2009

SOURCE: Fan runs constantly

one reason that a CPU fan may be running constantly is that it may not be able to cool the cpu down. usually this could be due to dust or debri clogging the incoming or outgoing vents or even dust accumulated on the fan itself or the heatsink.

joecoolvette

joecoolvette

  • 5660 Answers
  • Posted on May 31, 2010

SOURCE: HP Pavillion pc doesn't boot up ... no fan, no start sound, nothi

Bad Power Supply.

The blinking green light on the power supply, is a diagnostic light that indicates this.

Suggestion is to;
1) Test the Power Supply voltages
Or
2) Replace the Power Supply with a Known to be good, Compatible unit, for a test.

[Compatible:

A) It is an ATX style of power supply.
The style used by 90 percent, of personal computers out there.

Example: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=4975140&CatId=106

The test Power Supply unit should be mounted in the computer, for testing.
The power cables only reach so far, plus it is safer.

B) At least a 250 to 300 Watt unit, for a test unit. More Wattage is okay.

(The power supply that comes with the Pavilion a1310n, is a 300 Watt unit.

The 250 Watt unit stated above is just for a Test.
You are testing to see if the Power Supply is the problem.

More wattage is okay as a computer only uses what it needs.
If you have a 1000 Watt power supply installed, and the computer only needs 100 Watts; the computer only uses 100 watts.

The computer Will Not burn up, by installing a power supply with more Wattage than the original)

C) Correct amount of power cables, and correct kind.

Observe the power cables from the existing power supply, that are plugged into the various hardware components in the computer, and to the motherboard.

The test unit has to have the same power cables, and the correct amount of them.

Need help identifying these power cables, reply in a Comment.

The above may sound funny. Who has a spare power supply laying around, other than someone really committed to computers?

You may find yourself, or someone you may associate with, has a computer sitting in a closet, basement, attic or garage, that has a working power supply, (And is compatible), and can be used for a test unit.

Test the Voltages.

There are three main Voltages, produced by a personal computer power supply.
(DC. Direct Current)

1) 3.3 Volts (Wires that have Orange insulation)
2) 5 Volts (Red wires)
3) 12 Volts (Yellow wires)

(Two D cell flashlight batteries are 3 Volts {DC)

ANY Black wire is a Ground wire.

Use an economical multimeter to test the Voltages, or a power supply tester.

Multimeter:
Power Supply on.
Positive probe lead (Red) connects to the power wire to be tested.
Negative probe lead (Black) touches ANY Black wire.
(Black insulated wires are Ground wires)

This is one example of a power supply tester,

http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=5250576&CatId=5471

What causes Power Supply failure?

A) Inside of computer is dirty, as well as the inside of the Power Supply.

Computer unplugged from power, (Computer case open, and anti-static precautions observed), a can of compressed air for computers is used on a regular basis as needed, to help prevent this.

There are two cooling components for a SMPS.
(Switched Mode Power Supply)

1) The internal fan
2) The Heatsink's inside

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switched-mode_power_supply

A Heatsink, is an object used to draw heat from whatever hardware component, it is placed against.

A Heatsink is generally just a flat, square piece of metal, that has tall, thin fins protruding from it.

The flat metal base absorbs heat, whereby it is absorbed by the tall thin fins, and radiated away.

In the case of a Power Supply, there is an internal fan which draws air in-between the fins, helping to carry the heat away.

Once the fan blades, (Plus center hub, and surrounding cage), become coated with gunk, and the Heatsink fins become coated, the cooling capacity drops tremendously.

Heat = Wasted Energy.
The Power Supply has to produce more power, to keep up with loss of energy.
Eventually hardware components inside the Power Supply fail.

B) Cheap quality components used in the power supply. (Cheap quality power supply)

Awaiting any question you may have regarding this.
Post in a Comment.
(Believe upper right of your page)

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Loud fan in p6310y

Loud fan noise can indicate overheating issue.

Second hard drive, can go bad, your hp should have told you that once you turn on.

Suggest you run the hp diagnostic tool to figure out if it is hardware issue. See the link below

http://www8.hp.com/us/en/campaigns/hpsupportassistant/pc-diags.html
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Computer heats up fast

Heat is always a problem on PC of any kinds not serviced
ever clean it? of all that lint?
no OS stated,l 32bit OS will only do about 3.5GB, max.
on most cheaper PC that the GPU chip steals main ram to run.
all CPU made lower speed hot, inside the CPU CHIP
that is Intel magic inside doing that. deep where you cant go.
only cure is a good clean heatsink, good thermal bond compound
and good fan and a cas fan that runs. and works
the PSU has fan if it dies, how can the PSU keep cool
and the main chassis breath, unless it too has fan.
mine as I type has 4 fans
CPU
GPU
PSU
case.
all work and the case inside never ever overheats.
ever run a program to see CPU heat, ? it tell you its temperature.
do so and you see, omg it is too hot its like 90C.
this is the magic temp that the Intel inside kicks it and keeps CPU from burning itself up (they all do that since first Pentiums made to now)

that motherboard many not allow 4GB.
id have to look up the number stamped on it to be sure
this PC is old most are now scrapped. this old.
id scrape it and get a 64bit 2007 or newer PC with windows 7
there, or newer. I would, so it has value and a future.
HP has zero support on things this old. zip

again no OS stATED, BY you, how in the world can we guess that? and matters.
the old data sheet said 3GB max

https://www.cnet.com/products/hp-pavilion-a1050y/specs/

snopping about it says , Asus made it for HP under contract.
ASUS PTGD-LA
deep scans inside Hp finds this gem
4GB max, (and says less)
the fact is fining memory in 2016 for 12 year old mobo
and making its BIOS happy and that old Pentium 4.
is no fun at all, hard, and expensive.
Id up grade the PC before dumping cash on the wrothless
Pentiums are in the crush and recycle bin at Goodwill stores..




https://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c00361570
1helpful
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Computer Freeze-HP Pavilion dv9000

I agree about the over heating. I have to take my laptop apart about once a year and clean the dust out of it. When you do this, you have to remove the fan and inspect the shroud (once I had a dust ball that had obviously been rolling around and around in the shroud. It finally got do big that it stopped the fan). Also most of these laptops have an outlet that is vented. After all, if it wasn't a kid would stick something in it or a bug would crawl in it or whatever. The last time I cleaned mine, a layer of dust had formed over this out-vent. It formed so neat and perfect that at first I didn't know what I was looking at. It looked exactly like a manufactured filter. And then it hit me - "THERE AINT NO FILTERS, ANYWHERE!" lol........ There are in-vents all around. But only one outvent. If it gets stopped up, it doesn't matter what kind of fan you have. Your computer is going to overheat.

If you find that your out-vent is not stopped up, a good experiment would be to find four things to use as spacers and open up your computer. Block the top half (keypad-screen) up and watch what it does when running open.

Another thing that just came to mind - If your computer is overheating, you should hear your fan laboring (running hard and fast) way too much. If it isn't, maybe it's the fan control circuit/program. Under normal conditions, after start-up, it should slow down and become almost inaudible.

I hope you'll let me know what you discover.
Don
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Our fan is constantly running now for the last last 3 days when our computer is on. We have the computer on all day and shut it down at night. It is louder than normal. Why is this and can it be fixed. ...

Its not a problem if you have the computer running all day long. Get an additional fan for your computer. An additional fan will reduce the noise as more fans running at low speed produce low sound that a single fan at high speeds. Make sure that the CPU is free from dust. More the DUST, higher the heat and higher the noise.
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Hello, I have a problem with my widescreen. I have a laptop (HP Pavilion dv2418ca, Windows Vista, Memory 2,00 GB, Processor Intel (R) Core (TM) Duo CPU, 32-bit Operating System) and my widescreen...

It may be caused by overheating. Overheating is the main problem with HP portables. Use a fan to cool down the computer and check how long it last working. If blowing air with a fan "Appears to fix the problem" stop using the computer and get maintenance service for it. The processor area needs to be cleaned.
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Fan speed, HP Pavilion dv4000

www.almico.com/speedfan.php
speedfan here.
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My hp pavilion a1330n computer freezes on the HP

Hi,
the dreaded Blue-Screen of death.
Usually caused by:- Ram Failure ( memory Modules )
CPU Failure ( Processor Failure )
Hard-Disk faulty, not spinning et,c.
Cmos battery fault.
Missing/deleted/corrupted operating System files.

Possible Solutions:- remove cmos battery, from Motherboard for 10 seconds and replace. ( eliminates cmos/bios errors )
remove 1 stick of Memory ( Ram ) and test individually ( eliminates 1 or More Faulty sticks Of memory Or Slots )
remove, CPU Fan/heatsink, remove CPU and re-seat, re-grease with Artic-Silver or similar ( thermal-Compound ) replace heatsink/Fan. test.

Hope this points you towards a Sucessful repair.

Mike @ Compurepair. No-Links No-Nonsense Just Good Practical Advise :-)
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What is the maximum memory for this computer?

This computer (HP Pavilion a620n) has 2 x 184-pin DDR DIMM sockets and supports up to a maximum 2 GB of memory. It supports unbuffered PC2700/2100 non-ECC DDR SDRAM memory. (Also known as DDR333 and DDR2100 respectively)
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It is normal for the bottom to get hot. The fan should keep it cool enough to run, but it sounds like perhaps your fan is not working very well anymore and should be replaced.

Does the computer act up at all when cool? If not, the first thing I would try is replacing the fan and examining the fan and heatsink assembly for proper installation, perhaps replace the heatsink compound with some Arctic Silver while you have it open.
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Loud fan noise

hmm, it's very possible that the new fan is unable to spin fast enough to draw enough heat away fast enough. I'm guessing that this a separate video card and not the onboard video of the motherboard? and, is it the video card fan that is making all the noise?
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