“My Toshiba laptop suddenly shuts down by itself without any warning. Sometimes it works fine for hours, sometimes it shuts down in 10-15 minutes.” This complaint we hear from our customers over and over again. About 15-20% of all Toshiba laptops we get for repair, suffer from an overheating problem. Yep, OVERHEATING!

This is one of the most common problems with Toshiba laptops we deal with.

Indications of laptop overheating problem:

  1. The keyboard and the bottom of your laptop are very hot when the laptop is working.
  2. The CPU fans are working all the time at maximum rotation speed and operate much louder than before.
  3. The laptop suddenly shuts down by itself without warning. When it just started, the laptop was shutting down after 1-2 hours and how it shuts down after 5-10 minutes of operation.
  4. The laptop works fine when it runs idle, but shuts down as soon as you start using any memory demanding applications (DVD player, image editing software, video editing software, etc.).


Solution:

If the CPU heatsink is not clogged with dust and lint completely, you can use canned air and just blow it inside the laptop through the openings on the bottom and on the sides. It’s nice as a precaution measure, but it might not work if your laptop already has a problem and the heatsink is completely clogged.

  1. Open the laptop case, so you can access the CPU fan and the heatsink. In some cases you can access the heatsink through the latch on the bottom of the laptop. Sometimes (for example Toshiba Satellite A70/A75) you have to open the laptop case all the way down.
  2. Carefully disconnect the fan cables on the system board and remove the fan. If the fan makes unusual sound when it spins (grinding sound), I would recommend to replace the fan.
  3. Clean the fan and the heatsink with compressed air.
  4. I would also recommend removing old thermal grease from the CPU and applying new grease for better heat conductivity.


UPDATE: I just received a nice tip from MC N’Colorado. I think it could be useful for all of you with guys:

I decided to use a shop vac to suck the dust out and it worked. I tested it by letting the machine run all night and it worked. It’s been a couple of weeks now and I’m glad I did it. I was ready to take the machine apart, now I’m glad I didn’t. I’d suggest you use a heavy duty shop vac to clean out the fan and heat sinks first.

I agree. Try to fix the problem without taking the laptop apart first but I would recommend using a powerful air compressor instead of a vacuum cleaner.

If your laptop is still under warranty, you can take it to any Toshiba Authorize Service Provider and fix the problem at no charge to you.

Toshiba laptop disassembly guides with pictures and instructions.

 

Toshiba Satellite A15 Clogged Heatsink

Toshiba Satellite A15 Clogged Fan

 

Toshiba Satellite A35 Clogged Heatsink

Toshiba Satellite A35 Clogged Heatsink

 

Toshiba Satellite P15 Clogged Heatsink. Absolute champion!

 

Toshiba Satellite P15 Clogged Heatsink

 

Laptop Repair Videos

 

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1,061 Responses to “Why my Toshiba laptop suddenly shuts down by itself without warning?”

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  1. 640
    cj2600 Says:

    Kubes,
    Did you check the cooling fan? Does is start spinning when the CPU gets hot?
    If not, probably you have a bad fan.
    The cooling fan on Satellite L25 comes as a part of the heatsink. Here’s the Toshiba part number for the heatsink and fan: A000004350

  2. 639
    kubes Says:

    I’m have the same problem with a Satellite L25-S121 I’m trying to repair. Computer starts but shutsdown at any given time. Tried removing and replacing hard drives, removing mobo and reseating the cpu heatsink, blowing out fan and heatsinks, changing bios config back to default, updating bios, but still same symptoms continue. Seems as though when the processor is required to work at a speeds other than idle, the computer shuts off. Any recommendations or suggestions would be appreciated before I replace the mobo, heatsink and fan. Thanks.

  3. 638
    Albert Says:

    I have a two year odl Toshiba Satellite A-75 that now gets so hot I could use it to make a “keyboard waffle” if I only had some mix standing ready when it shuts down. I’ve used a vac to such the lint from the fans several times each month but that no longer seems to work. I purchased a $7.00 mini desktop fan at the local hardware store on Sunday that now blows on the back of the computer whenever I’m using it. It has not shut down since I bought the fan but after reading this very helpful page, I’ll be looking at the heat sink next. thanks for the help. Now where’s that Bisquick!

  4. 637
    Eric Says:

    I just bought my A215-S7462 not 2 weeks ago. I’ve had it shut down on me 3 times. The second time I had been alternating between my lap and the table, but the other two were on solid funiture (glass once and wood the other). I’ve used laptops for years in the military and never seen this kind of heat problem. Even the power adapter gets hot. Now I have the back (under screen) lifted up on a small phone book hoping more air will equal longer work hours. I’ve been looking at the cooling pads. Why do they all pull air instead of forcing air up to cool the bottom of laptops? There would surely be more air-flow. Have to look that route since I will be using this computer so much. There are othe computers out there, so maybe I should look at how hot they run and return this.

  5. 636
    cj2600 Says:

    jessica,
    If your laptop overheats because of a bad fan then I would assume you’ll have to replace the fan. For a Satellite L25 the cooling fan comes as a part of the thermal module. You can find a new thermal module by this part number: A000004350. But in order to replace the fan, you’ll have to take the whole laptop apart and remove the motherboard.

  6. 635
    jessica Says:

    my Toshiba Satellite L25 _S119 is over heating the Fan is not working at all, What the heck happened please help me

  7. 634
    Kishor Says:

    I have Toshiba pT831C-30Qw6 laptop that is turning on but it doesnt give any display i checked up memory, its working good, may be some problem in system board so can any body give solution to repair system board ?

  8. 633
    cj2600 Says:

    Jim,
    Did you test the hard drive?
    You can try this. Remove the hard drive and boot the laptop from a live Linux CD, you can use Knoppix for this purpose. This will load Linux OS directly from the CD bypassing the hard drive. If the laptop is stable when Linux is loaded, your problem could be related to the hard drive.

  9. 632
    Marvin Sabillon Says:

    Hi.
    Please help, i have toshiba Satellite a75-s206. i put password in the Bios. and now i need to reinstall windows and modificate the bios setup.
    please tellme wha t ia can do for reset the Bios, because i dont know reset
    So Thk

  10. 631
    Jim Says:

    I have a Toshiba M45-s2693 that (was) spontaneously restarting shortly after Windows XP (SP2) starts. I completely disassembled, some dust blockage of heat sink, fan runs off and on as it should…everything is clean now. Disabled auto reboot but it still restarted…no stopping on a blue screen. Removed everyting from startup using msconfig. Restored system from factory cd and still a problem but now instead of restarting it simply freezes. BIOS was updated about 3 months ago and unit was working fine until now. Has (2) 512k RAM boards, removed one at a time, swapped sockets, same problem. It will run in Safe mode without shutting down. I figure it is probably a hardware problem and was going to try turning diabling things one at a time in Device Manager but there is nothing listed there while I am in Safe mode. Is it time to replace the System board?

Pages: « 10769 68 67 66 65 [64] 63 62 61 60 591 » Show All

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