Is it due to heat?
I noticed this morning that one of my cores shuts down during heavy load. This has never happened on my Macbook Pro. See attached jpg.
Anyone else have this problem?
Is it due to heat?
What were you doing at the time?
I'm sure you've never seen a Macbook or Mac mini hit 190° F then.Could be the first major MBA problem?
I must say that 158* is pretty high...call up Apple.
Most systems are not suppossed to get above 70c. The reason for the core shutdown is three fold, 1) to reduce heat, 2) to save power when not needed, 3) to save battery life when unplugged.
You should be able to deactivate this "feature" by selecting "maximum" as your processor speed in the energy saver preference pane.
TEG
Nah, just because there is a lot of virtual memory allocated doesn't mean there is a lot of swapping going on. We'd have to see his memory tab to know more.
I was primarily encoding video using VisualHub for my iPhone, and downloading something with Transmission. The computer was sitting on a marble table in my hotel room.
On my Macbook Pro, I am able to run the processors at 100% all day long encoding video. The fans would spin up at max and be very noisy, but I could do it if I wanted and the cores have never shut down like this. My first Macbook Pro, the core 1 duo, would sometimes even reach 85-90 degrees C / 185-194 F. My rev 2, Macbook Pro doesn't ever get that hot.
The processor on my Air almost never even reached 100%. I would have expected in the Air, Apple should have tested it and designed it so it could run at 100% without overheating and triggering a CPU shutdown.
I love my Air, but I think this is a mistake. Apple does like to push the thermal envelope all the time and I think they went a bit too far. Hopefully there would be a software fix for this.
Hopefully it won't melt your laptop. Then again Apple changed the thermal tolerances and fan speeds for the G5 in Leopard.Mr.Green said:Hopefully there would be a software fix for this.