R RyanPianesi New Member Mar 31, 2012 #21 Okay, Well thanks for the help.. & Thanks for dealing with me..I know I can be a pain in the A*S sometimes.
Okay, Well thanks for the help.. & Thanks for dealing with me..I know I can be a pain in the A*S sometimes.
M Mishkin New Member Apr 1, 2012 #22 voyagerfan99 said: Thermal pads don't become crusty. And no I don't. I didn't often monitor them. But my Eee got (pleasantly) warm. Click to expand... I assure you, thermal pads CAN get crusty. At least the one on my 12-year-old Pentium 3 did. It was green too, and nearly disintegrated.
voyagerfan99 said: Thermal pads don't become crusty. And no I don't. I didn't often monitor them. But my Eee got (pleasantly) warm. Click to expand... I assure you, thermal pads CAN get crusty. At least the one on my 12-year-old Pentium 3 did. It was green too, and nearly disintegrated.
voyagerfan99 Master of Turning Things Off and Back On Again Staff member Apr 2, 2012 #23 Mishkin said: I assure you, thermal pads CAN get crusty. At least the one on my 12-year-old Pentium 3 did. It was green too, and nearly disintegrated. Click to expand... After that long period of time and use, certainly. But I don't expect an Acer netbook to actually work in another 12 years.
Mishkin said: I assure you, thermal pads CAN get crusty. At least the one on my 12-year-old Pentium 3 did. It was green too, and nearly disintegrated. Click to expand... After that long period of time and use, certainly. But I don't expect an Acer netbook to actually work in another 12 years.