Sage, I have no idea how you mean me to answer those with only the temp under load.
Shouldn't I also know the characteristics of my chips for that? Or is there some temperature before which all semiconductors are good and after that all are broken?
If it were just a thing of peak temperature... why are thermally damaged batteries not a rare occurrence? Surely the OS could detect it passing the threshold, and choose to stop the process or risk the battery depending on some setting, if it were just that one number.
I'd expect the laptop is designed such that it's impossible for the battery to be damaged by a chip running within its normal operating temps, but you'd probably need to look at a repair manual for those sorts of specs
That's a thing I want to unravel, actually.
Santiago of Chile is pretty dusty, and its dust is sticky (yay diesel). My battery did get damaged due to temperature, and I wonder if that's because the system wasn't tested for the cooling to get covered by such things.
Yeah, I want something pretty much akin to a test suite that can be used to diagnose issues, hopefully early, without having to keep a spreadsheet of monthly temp tests, nor having to disassemble the notebook.
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Shouldn't I also know the characteristics of my chips for that? Or is there some temperature before which all semiconductors are good and after that all are broken?
Santiago of Chile is pretty dusty, and its dust is sticky (yay diesel). My battery did get damaged due to temperature, and I wonder if that's because the system wasn't tested for the cooling to get covered by such things.