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Soulwatcher 02-23-2006 09:44 AM

Router over heating?
 
This might sound kind of crazy but I think my router is over heating. Its pretty hot to the touch. Web pages are freezing up on me, its like they pause for 5 seconds or so and then they work again. Graphics are not loading on some web pages, its kind of crazy. If its not over heating it must be near death LOL.:p Anyone ever have a router act up like that?

Jason 02-23-2006 10:53 AM

Yes, I have. Do you use a lot of bandwidth for a long amount of time (even locally)?

I'm not sure what your setup is right now either.

QBall15j 02-23-2006 12:29 PM

Are you referring to the router you got from Comcast for your business line? I know this is pretty obvious but clear anything from around it, remove any heat generating devices from under the router and if possible, set the router upright on its side.

Soulwatcher 02-23-2006 02:35 PM

I have 3 routers, 1 from Comcast which is a Modem/router and 2 Linksys routers. They were all stacked on each other. The center router was hot enough to cook a egg. I moved everything around, they are not stacked anymore and the Modem/router is upright. I will go check on them in a bit and see how they are doing. I never thought about massive heat build up by stacking them. Hopefully everything is fixed now. Thanks for the advice guys.

CrazyShooter 02-24-2006 09:38 AM

I have a linskeys and that does get hot sometimes.. But my internet doesnt turn slow or turn of or anything.. Maybe its your web surplier

job36_22 03-01-2006 12:07 PM

Yeah i'd almost garentee that your problem was stacking I learned the hard way never stack any electronics :P but alas youve found that out anyway

barefeet 06-29-2013 12:24 PM

adding a fan??
 
I've seen a few youtubes with their routers modified with cpu fans, any comments on that?

fredpeterson543 08-24-2023 02:04 AM

Your router’s overheating problem may also be a result of poor design work by the manufacturer. For instance, the manufacturer might fail to drill enough air vents or might install a chip that runs pretty hot in the circuitry, thus causing endless heat problems.

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