Hello… I’m here to ask a difficult question… The answer is not complex, I believe, difficult for someone to answer…
Does anyone have TW, or Leap, installed on a Lenovo Ideapad 330 15ikb?
The sensors show that the temperature of the wifi card is more than 50º celsus, while in Fedora it does not reach 37º celsus.
Is the temperature being measured correctly in the TW?
How can I check this?
Using thermometer (thermopile), IMHO.
Could the difference between TW and Fedora be that WiFi power management is configured differently?
You’re right, I should tell you how I measured the temperature. I used a terminal window and typed ‘sensors’. In Debian, with the psensor, the temperature is also no more than 37º celsus.
Good question
I think it was worth at least a try… This is important to me, and I didn’t get any response using google search. Anyway, thanks for the answers, even if one of them seems like humor.
Hi
Only way is direct with either a thermocouple or infrared temperature tool (I use a model engine aircraft one or via my multimeter and thermocouple) then can create a sensors file with appropriate math function to correct if required.
Just because it says one thing in one operating system and a different result in another could be a mismatch in kernels divers and sensors version with different calculations.
For example with power supply voltages I have the likes of;
compute in1 @ * 12, @ / 12
set in1_min 12 * 0.95
set in1_max 12 * 1.1
Many thanks for the reply…
I would like to have the ability to open a laptop… I am very clumsy, I would certainly do something wrong… And I would spoil something, I am already 56 years old… I know myself…
I’ll settle for Fedora on Lenovo… Nothing against Fedora, but it’s not openSUSE…
Hi
Is it a tablet or actual laptop, fixit usually have good videos for dis-assembly of laptops etc, if a standard type laptop should have a panel on the bottom for removal to access RAM, HDD and normally the wifi card…
So, just a question, how do you know that any other operating system is reporting the correct value
Perhaps a bug report to the sensors maintainer might glean additional information?
It’s a laptop… I saw how to open it on youtube, I know it’s very easy for you, but I’ll end up finding a way to ruin something… Left over to take to a technician… But I don’t think it’s worth it.
The problem is not with openSUSE!
It’s more like the relationship that this Lenovo model establishes with openSUSE. So much so, that my Acer works wonderfully with openSUSE.
Thanks for trying to help, you were always very kind.
Hi
No worries, use what works I have a Lenovo G570, repowered it with a spare i5 cpu and runs SLED 15 SP3, wifi absolutely sucks on it (if it’s not lenovo mac addressed it won’t allow system to boot)…need to replace the wifi card but I use ethernet connection and unlikely to use outside the home
Maybe yes, maybe no.
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I know I won’t find out if yes or if not…
Maybe another one who has what I don’t have: Necessary knowledge. haha
To whom to be interested…
I made my last attempt to install openSUSE, on a Lenovo Ideapad 330 15ikb…
This time it was with Leap 15.3, by the way an excellent job of yours, and I used offline installation, the sensors showed a very low temperature of the wifi card, less than 30º celsus…
Shortly after I went online, after updates with #zypper up… The sensors show a very high temperature on the wifi card, 56º celsus…
I get frustrated that I can’t use openSUSE on this Lenovo, but that’s life…