VaioShutdown.com

 


What causes "Premature Deactivation"?

When Sony designed the first Vaio laptops, the fastest CPU chip Intel made for portable computers ran at 166 mHz, and Sony designed their processor board and heatsink/fan to dispose of the heat generated by that chip.

When subsequent products using faster and faster chips were developed, they don't seem to have bothered to go back and redesign the thermal tolerance of the CPU subsystem, with the result that numerous components in the newer models overheat and cause instability in the processor.

The most immediate consequence of this instability is a false "overheat" signal that causes the operating system's Power Management software to shut down the computer prematurely. In advanced cases, the computer won't start up at all.

Our fix replaces the subpar components with superior parts having greater heat tolerance.