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<<   >>  October  2 / "Adam? ...is there a reason your laptop is in the fridge?"

     I'd read a few times that bringing the temperature of a failing drive down will increase its reliability long enough to salvage important files. When the drive in my trusty Powerbook decided one day last week to stop booting and make horrible clicking sounds, I decided to test the theory.

     Not feeling particularly motivated to dissect the powerbook, since that would void the warranty I planned to invoke to get the drive replaced, I set it on a relatively uncluttered shelf of the fridge when I got home from work. Ten minutes later, I took it out, and the drive booted like new. I copied my iphoto libraries to an external drive and once that was successful, begun the copying of the only other important file on the drive: a giant iMovie project (~ 30 GB). About halfway through, the drive had warmed up, the copy progress bar had stalled and the clicking was back.

     Fair enough. Back in the fridge, for 20 minutes this time. I took it out, booted up (painlessly), hooked it up to the external drive and started the copy again. This time it made it to 75% before the clicking took hold. At this point I considered going after the video clips that made up the iMovie project in small batches, but decided I didn't feel like doing that if it wasn't absolutely necessary. I also didn't want to play guess and check to discover the ideal length of time to chill a powerbook, so I devised a devious plot.

     This plot consisted of cooling the powerbook down again, carting my external drive to the kitchen, booting the laptop in the fridge, beginning the copy, and closing the door. Success! I share this experience with you, the internet, in the hopes that it is useful.

Devious plot.  Will it work?

Yes.  It will work.
Comments

Totally awesome, and smart! And you have a ton in your fridge.

Joe C. / Monday, Oct 2 / 10:58 AM

Did French’s mustard pay for advertising in your pictures?

Brad

Brad / Monday, Oct 2 / 12:58 PM

I have used this trick many times and it works like a big, frozen charm. Cheers!

hollerboll / Tuesday, Oct 3 /  3:19 PM

It's like geek cribs: "You know, we got some mustard, some beers, gotta have beers. And you know, this is where I keep my powerbook. Keepin' them drives nice and chill.

Zach N / Tuesday, Oct 3 /  5:45 PM

The freezer works even better.

jen / Monday, Nov 6 / 10:19 PM

I often use this trick for my $20 DVD player that easily overheats and doesn't like to return discs. Fridge=magic.

p.s. mmm, garden fresh salsa.

Stephanie / Monday, Jan 8 /  7:25 PM

Awesome! I used this trick there is a decade now! It was for cooling the AC adapter of my Game Box !!

Mahmoud M'HIRI / Wednesday, Jul 18 / 12:31 PM

i thought about this but i was afraid there might be water damage from the fridge or something..
i took mine outside at 3am about 60F out and it worked for an hour before shuttin down.
Im going to put mine in the freezer right now..

sean / Wednesday, Nov 14 /  3:43 AM

Thanks for sharing and thx for ACME

Saludos desde Caracas, Venezuela

Ze

Ze / Saturday, Jan 12 /  1:01 AM

Very good idea. My Thinkpad T42p has been terribly overheating due to a fan failure: the graphics card and CPU heat up to about 120 degrees C before my laptop freezes up and all I can do is cut the power and let it cool down. Actually, I just put it in the fridge about 30 minutes ago, then googled "laptop fridge" to see how long I should keep it in there and then I found this blog.

LOL, someone just came in here and asked me why my laptop was in the fridge. :D

Isaac / Friday, Mar 21 /  5:19 PM

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