Spouse got a laptop from a pawn shop. It needed a keyboard replacement and a cleaning so I spent my morning taking it apart and cleaning. Normally I just use a cloth and some compressed air on the dusty fans and we were good. Well compressed air turned the fan into a SMG. Those fins were YEETED across the room. In all my years of seeing shop accidents this was the most surprising and funny one yet.

Thank goodness the fans are cheap to replace. 😏

43 Comments

  1. Past_Succotash6772

    jesus did u use a jet engine?

  2. Popular-Accident4020

    On the positive side, it does look clean now

  3. if you MUST use compressed air you’re supposed to brace from the opposite side so they dont spin or flex

    that’s what I do in a pinch

  4. The issue is usually in creating a generator rather than a shrapnel gun, but I guess if you force more air through it than it’s designed for, going at higher speeds than it’s designed for, then sure this happens.

  5. Exoplanet0

    Fins were probably worn out, the reason you don’t want to use compressed air on fans is because PC fans are DC motors and turning them can generate a current that has potential to cause damage. I hold my fans with a finger and blast them without any issues like this.

  6. -BodomKnight-

    Damn … This fan was probably too much dried and this is why every blade broke.

  7. VisualGuidance3714

    I didn’t know you could disassemble the fan blades to clean them better!!!

  8. Computer_Cellar

    This may have been plastic degradation in action, especially if it’s an older device (which it kinda looks like it).

  9. Nerfarean

    This the new high tech Fanless cooling solution?

  10. costabius

    but making fans go zzzzzzzziiiIIIIIIIINNNNNNGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG is fun!

  11. Takeasmoke

    i don’t own laptop, last one i cleaned was ~2017 and compressed air did not do that to the fan i also have GTX 1060 (desktop) with blower fan that i cleaned many times with compressed air and it was fine. my guess would be that plastic lost its integrity due to overheating in the past

  12. FewAdvertising9647

    its why when using any air duster, you’re supposed to hold down moving parts so that they don’t end up moving/spinning faster than they are designed to

  13. Skwerl_Master

    can’t do this with punk ass canned air or a vacuum

  14. Beni_Stingray

    Not only this but the electric motor in there will act as a dynamo if you blow compressed air on it and can introduce current into the electric board and fry stuff if youre unlucky.

  15. Artistic_Data9398

    i did this on an old laptop too. Swear it was the same fan. Weak and feeble.

  16. Imperial_Bouncer

    On the bright side, now it’s gonna be even quieter than the Noctuas.

  17. rull3211

    on the bright side nowyou got passive cooling

  18. Random_Questions236

    the fins’ plastic was probably cooked, the fan’s time had come. oh well.I guess better to find out this way than to have it disentigrate while it’s in the laptop eh?

  19. Impressive-Repeat274

    The fan ain’t faning anymore

  20. Uwibamie

    Brother, did you legit let the fans spin freely while you cleaned them?!

  21. Tooth pick between fans while you use one saves them

  22. JohnnyChuttz

    ![gif](giphy|WxDZ77xhPXf3i|downsized)

  23. The blades broke because they were shittly made or you used a jet engine. Cleaned a bunch of laptops without issue with cans

  24. KatieS2255

    Did you use an air compressor? Like the big tanks and big metal nozzle?? Not an air can? lmao

  25. Least_Possibility740

    So, does she love you or not?

  26. Jumaluus

    I did that to my video projector, was’t cheap to replace 😀

  27. Flossthief

    You can use air on fans but use your finger to hold the fan in place

    They’re basically tiny windmills and if you spin them too fast they’ll shatter

    A clean paintbrush also works on fans if this experience changes your habits

  28. Or you know… You could have just placed one finger on the fan to stop it from spinning.

  29. Turn off the fan first….. like, wtf were you thinking?

  30. JanuszBiznesu96

    Not only this, you can fry your motherboard doing that on a plugged in fan since back driving a motor turns it into a generator, and if a fan spins at 2500rpm at 12V if you spin it at 20000 the voltage will be much higher.

  31. ziplock9000

    Still wrong. It’s fine to use them if you support the fans from rotation and yaw.

  32. Nicademus2003

    Looks like it was… not a fan after compressed air XD

  33. Danvideotech2385

    I’ve done that plenty with my old Dell Inspiron laptop just to hear the fan go “reeeeeee” and not once did a blade ever snap off. I guess they don’t make them like they used to.

  34. Powersoutdotcom

    I have the same compressor, and it doesn’t seem that strong, even with the smallest focus nozzle. I’ll be a bit more cautious now that I’ve seen this.

    Did it spin up to sonic speeds before it shattered, or did the blades just get swept off before they could spin up?

  35. GalaxLordCZ

    No, they say it because almost any electric motor is also a generator, so if you spin them you could burn some things in the computer, never seen this happen.

  36. swiftpwns

    You can totally use a industrial compressor, just hold the fan still when doing it.

  37. SsilverBloodd

    Didn’t realize pc fans came in the Dyson bladeless variant.

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