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Notebook lid
What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid
cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? |
#2
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Notebook lid
Barny wrote:
What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? First approximation: Zero. Banish any household member who puts something on it , Two days, if the item contains liquid . |
#3
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Notebook lid
Barny wrote:
What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? If you compress the layers of the LCD screen, what will happen ? LCD isn't designed to be compressed. At the very least, you run the risk of scratching the front surface of the LCD, with the keys of the keyboard. ******* For an imaginative analysis, we could use this info: http://www.panasonic.com/business/To...ant-laptop.asp "20 times stronger than ABS plastic" "Business-rugged Toughbook laptops are compression-tested to withstand 220 lbs. of pressure" That means, you can stand on a Toughbook, but if we do the arithmetic, then 220/20 == 11 lbs for a normal notebook :-) :-) If you stand on top of your Vostro, I expect all it will be useful for, is standing on, in the future. HTH, Paul |
#4
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Notebook lid
On 7/23/2011 2:36 PM, Paul wrote:
Barny wrote: What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? If you compress the layers of the LCD screen, what will happen ? LCD isn't designed to be compressed. At the very least, you run the risk of scratching the front surface of the LCD, with the keys of the keyboard. ******* For an imaginative analysis, we could use this info: http://www.panasonic.com/business/To...ant-laptop.asp "20 times stronger than ABS plastic" "Business-rugged Toughbook laptops are compression-tested to withstand 220 lbs. of pressure" That means, you can stand on a Toughbook, but if we do the arithmetic, then 220/20 == 11 lbs for a normal notebook :-) :-) If you stand on top of your Vostro, I expect all it will be useful for, is standing on, in the future. HTH, Paul Those "early" ToughBooks were definitely stout. When I was issued a CF-25 at wurk, I took it down to my Air National Guard base and "painted" it with a HMMV(GRC-206) tire by driving over it. It later gained some interesting grouser gouges after I accidentally backed over it with a SnoCat. I tried buying it when it went to surplus years later, but they were donating them to small police departments.... Oh well! -- "**** this is it, all the pieces do fit. We're like that crazy old man jumping out of the alleyway with a baseball bat, saying, "Remember me mother****er?" Jim “Dandy” Mangrum |
#5
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Notebook lid
"Paul" wrote in message ... Barny wrote: What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? If you compress the layers of the LCD screen, what will happen ? LCD isn't designed to be compressed. At the very least, you run the risk of scratching the front surface of the LCD, with the keys of the keyboard. ******* For an imaginative analysis, we could use this info: http://www.panasonic.com/business/To...ant-laptop.asp "20 times stronger than ABS plastic" "Business-rugged Toughbook laptops are compression-tested to withstand 220 lbs. of pressure" That means, you can stand on a Toughbook, but if we do the arithmetic, then 220/20 == 11 lbs for a normal notebook :-) :-) If you stand on top of your Vostro, I expect all it will be useful for, is standing on, in the future. HTH, Paul .................................. Someone regularly put Power supply block onto a laptop cover, just to save space on the table, after finishing work. Power supply unit is around 1.10 lbs.. Seems it's safe enough in this case? Barny |
#6
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Notebook lid
Somewhere on teh intarwebs Paul wrote:
Barny wrote: What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? If you compress the layers of the LCD screen, what will happen ? LCD isn't designed to be compressed. At the very least, you run the risk of scratching the front surface of the LCD, with the keys of the keyboard. ******* For an imaginative analysis, we could use this info: http://www.panasonic.com/business/To...ant-laptop.asp "20 times stronger than ABS plastic" "Business-rugged Toughbook laptops are compression-tested to withstand 220 lbs. of pressure" That means, you can stand on a Toughbook, but if we do the arithmetic, then 220/20 == 11 lbs for a normal notebook :-) :-) If you stand on top of your Vostro, I expect all it will be useful for, is standing on, in the future. HTH, Paul My rule of thumb is to not put stuff on top of laptops *but* for storage purposes I sometimes oput them on top of each other and NEVER more than three in a stack. That's not to say that it's right.... I've just never had a problem with that. Mind you I'm talking ThinkPads, the latest being made in 2007.... I once went to put a fourth on a stack as I'm pushed for room and thought better of it. It just seemed to be too much. Cheers, -- Shaun. "He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche |
#7
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Notebook lid
"Barny" wrote in message
... What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? An exact pressure or weight is hard to specify because you could probably rest a large flat object of many Kgs on the laptop and all would be well as the mass is distributed and the delecate screen inside won't be flexed or damaged, but anything more than a few hundred grams on just the centre of the lid could damage the LCD panel. I currently have 10 CDs and a pair of pliers on mine - near the edge. I would put much more on it and I don't tend to put things in the centre of the closed lid. If the lid starts to flex, then you have pushed it the limit and you are probably flexing or pushing on the delecate LCD panel inside. |
#8
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Notebook lid
"Nobody (Revisited)" wrote in message
... On 7/23/2011 2:36 PM, Paul wrote: Barny wrote: What is the maximum(safe) pressure(weight) allowed for notebook Lid cover?(Dell vostro 1520) I mean if notebook just stay at the table with closed Lid and if we put some heavy item onto the Lid cover.. Didn't find, is there some info in specification? If you compress the layers of the LCD screen, what will happen ? LCD isn't designed to be compressed. At the very least, you run the risk of scratching the front surface of the LCD, with the keys of the keyboard. ******* For an imaginative analysis, we could use this info: http://www.panasonic.com/business/To...ant-laptop.asp "20 times stronger than ABS plastic" "Business-rugged Toughbook laptops are compression-tested to withstand 220 lbs. of pressure" That means, you can stand on a Toughbook, but if we do the arithmetic, then 220/20 == 11 lbs for a normal notebook :-) :-) If you stand on top of your Vostro, I expect all it will be useful for, is standing on, in the future. HTH, Paul Those "early" ToughBooks were definitely stout. When I was issued a CF-25 at wurk, I took it down to my Air National Guard base and "painted" it with a HMMV(GRC-206) tire by driving over it. It later gained some interesting grouser gouges after I accidentally backed over it with a SnoCat. I don't think you leave your laptop in the safest places!! |
#9
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Notebook lid
On 7/26/2011 7:17 AM, GT wrote:
Those "early" ToughBooks were definitely stout. When I was issued a CF-25 at wurk, I took it down to my Air National Guard base and "painted" it with a HMMV(GRC-206) tire by driving over it. It later gained some interesting grouser gouges after I accidentally backed over it with a SnoCat. I don't think you leave your laptop in the safest places!! This was a wurk laptop, I treat my own better.. You do have to consider that this was at an electric power utility. Things get fuzzy when you've been working for 30+ hours straight in a storm fixing outages My CF-25 foibles only caused cosmetic damage, if anything it added character, like holster wear on a good pistol. One of the bucket truck crews had one fall out of the back of the truck on the freeway in traffic doing about 50mph. The crew behind saw it fall out and get run over by 2 to 5 cars, but they were able to stop traffic and retrieve it. It still worked fine, but did need some case parts replaced due to cracks. IIRC, we started out with about 150 CF-25s of the 1st gen P150/P166 version. When they were "officially" phased out 7 years later, 20 were written off for major physical damage, 15 had bit the dust with major electronics issues, and 30 were "unaccountable for". I know a lot of those weren't stolen, just 'conveniently lost' as the users didn't want to give them up! If I find one at a price I'm willing to pay, I may still buy one and load 98SE on it *just because* -- "**** this is it, all the pieces do fit. We're like that crazy old man jumping out of the alleyway with a baseball bat, saying, "Remember me mother****er?" Jim “Dandy” Mangrum |
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