Originally posted by: potato28
What exactly are the baking instructions for a laptop? 350 for 30 minutes for an Eee PC, 475 for 2 hours for a brand new Dell XPS or Alienware or the new Envy?
Originally posted by: hanoverphist
not a dumb idea, but not the smartest. blowing air over the system would have much better results, as most ovens dont have any circulation to move that hot air around. if you keep it around 130 deg it shouldnt bother most components in there, but the moisture still wont dissipate much better than just putting a few fans on it in room temp. best thing you can do is take as many covers off as you can and let it sit for 4 days.
Originally posted by: AbsolutDealage
Originally posted by: hanoverphist
not a dumb idea, but not the smartest. blowing air over the system would have much better results, as most ovens dont have any circulation to move that hot air around. if you keep it around 130 deg it shouldnt bother most components in there, but the moisture still wont dissipate much better than just putting a few fans on it in room temp. best thing you can do is take as many covers off as you can and let it sit for 4 days.
All convection ovens have a small fan which circulates the hot air.
Originally posted by: techs
Interesting to read all the remarks.
In fact, I just barely heat the oven. Its about 90-95 degrees in there. Pop in the laptop for about 30 minutes, than remove and blow out with air. Repeat three or four times.
Originally posted by: techs
Interesting to read all the remarks.
In fact, I just barely heat the oven. Its about 90-95 degrees in there. Pop in the laptop for about 30 minutes, than remove and blow out with air. Repeat three or four times.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Pics or shens, naturally.