A less extreme, but sort of harder way to do it, you could make a new
DSDT table with custom fan variables (what temp to turn on, what
speed, etc) and then have windows load that on startup.

And as a side note I even heard that some OEM's turned off the crysis
recovery feature from Phoenix Bios's for whatever reason.
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 2:49 AM, THEfog . <[email protected]> wrote:
> READ CAREFULLY!!!!
>
> If you are going to flash your BIOS do it from DOS as Espionage said because
> I have seem many a failed attempt from customers trying to flash their BIOS
> from inside windows and unfortuantly it isn't something that can be fixed
> unless you have a Dual-BIOS or BIOS which supports Crysis Disks, but in all
> reality you shouldn't really need to flash your BIOS if you clean out your
> lappy, you see your computer has sensors all over the motherboard that
> detect what temperature's all your components are getting up too, and if
> your PC see's it is getting to hot it will vamp up Fan speed dramatically to
> try and cool your machine. So if there is dust inside your laptop then this
> dust will do multiple things to cause you grief including insulating parts
> like your CPU and GPU, blocking airflow inside your laptop, clogging up fans
> making it more difficult to turn consistently which means more power has to
> be pumped to it to keep it turning etc.
>
> So if you strip down your laptop and clean the dust all out you should
> immediatly notice ambient and CPU/GPU temperature go down, and if you have
> it in handy you may want to put some fresh thermal paste on the
> CPU and GPU (once you cleaned the old dry stuff off of-course) trust me when
> I say that at work I have seen computer running with a ambient temperature
> of 70+ degrees celsius go down to 40+ just by cleaning out the Fans and
> components and removing all the floating and built up dust deposits, and
> also the cooler a computer runs the better it will perform and unfourtuantly
> no BIOS update is going to magically purge all the dust from your system
> lol. Give it a try and get back to us if you need help, trust me you will
> always want to leave the BIOS update as a last resort because you can brick
> your machine by accident if even the smallest thing goes wrong.
>
> THEfog
>
> On 26/02/2010 7:54 AM, "Espionage724" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> bios updates could fix the problem, but it is stated that a bios
> update could be in other words, "bad" if it fails...
>
> So my suggestion is to flash from dos if at all possible first. I
> flash from windows all the time and had no bad experiences, however I
> heard people BSOD'ing during the process, and having bricks
>
> On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 4:37 PM, hussam aulaian <[email protected]> wrote:
>> guys guys guys guys ...
>
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> Espionage724 Has A Signature...
>
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>
> INTEL 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS
>
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