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Laptop Fans - besides cleaning, is it possible to get better RPM's with oiling or something?


GanjaSMK

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MSI Raider GE75 - specifically the 10SE model (thanks Costco!)

 

Working well, but fans should be at 6000+ RPM on their 'full speed' mode.  Have cleaned them out a few times and get better temps/results and short of repasting (which I'm not inclined to do right now) is there anything I can do to get them back to their original 6000+ RPM's?  There are (2) fans one on each side and currently after last cleaning one is at 5500~ and the other at 5200~.  Am I doing it wrong? lol...

 

Oiling?


Swapping seems like huge project for little return investment . . .

 

Anyone have experience with this kinda thing? 

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If you can remove the fan blade from the pin it rests on you can try cleaning the pin. That would probably make a bigger difference than oil, but u could try adding a tiny bit of oil at that point if you want to. 

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  • 4 months later...
On 03/10/2022 at 20:04, GanjaSMK said:

MSI Raider GE75 - specifically the 10SE model (thanks Costco!)

 

Working well, but fans should be at 6000+ RPM on their 'full speed' mode.  Have cleaned them out a few times and get better temps/results and short of repasting (which I'm not inclined to do right now) is there anything I can do to get them back to their original 6000+ RPM's?  There are (2) fans one on each side and currently after last cleaning one is at 5500~ and the other at 5200~.  Am I doing it wrong? lol...

 

Oiling?


Swapping seems like huge project for little return investment . . .

 

Anyone have experience with this kinda thing? 

Bit of a late response, but the main way of getting a higher speed out of those fans typically lies with either software or a BIOS update. I would definitely start there.

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Scalling with rpm is not linear i don't think that from 5200 to 6000 rpm their a big airflow difference. And normally fan without oil spin faster till they heat up and seize.

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Cleaning the fans, oiling them, and re-timming the heatsinks always helps.....well, until its too late and it doesn't.  🤣

 

If the motor itself is starting to wear, no you'll never get the RPM's back.  If the above doesn't do enough, it MIGHT just be about time to do a full replacement.  Up to you of course, I mean its still working at 5200RPM, and you'd likely see a better temp drop from a TIM change than getting those extra 800 RPM's back.

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While this is not a "helpful" post, your talking of fan improvements for me thinking of the below video. Problem is, it may make your laptop a little loud. 

 

 

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  • 1 month later...

Did u monitor the rpm at full tilt when u first bought the laptop?  If so what was the original max rpm?  I'd replace the fans if u feel they aren't pulling rpm like before but u can tell if there is damage to the bearing if the fans are hard to turn by finger or feel any friction.  I would personally replace them and if u don't have a software option to force to full tilt while under load or creating a custom fan profile.  Just snip the PWM wires, the blue wire usually or u always have a red positive wire, a black ground wire, a yellow rpm sense wire, and a pwm wire could be green but usually is blue just cut it and forget about it on both fans if u cant control the fans by software in the operating system.  This will yield peak performance on the CPU & GPU on all tasks all the time.  Good luck

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