Obviously, the MacBook Pro's fan controller is not tuned for this scenario and does not speed up the fans soon enough, because it ASSUMES that the laptop is doing well in the current temperature, which is actually not. Not letting the laptop warp up to that stage. My 5-fan cooling pad substantially cools down the aluminum body of the Mac, but the issue still appears. The screen keeps flickering until I shut down the laptop, (or I close the lid and work with external mouse and keyboard, and after 1 an hour, the screen is OK when I open the lid.)īring MB back to the store and perhaps change the cable or whatever: It's hard to reproduce and Apple stores are closed due to COVID-19 :|īuy a cooling pad: I tried it and it didn't work. On my MacBook Pro 2017 15" (A1707), however, after a couple of hours of use on (arguably) high temperature, the internal monitor (not the external one) starts to flicker badly, like this: The common advice is to just live with it because the system will prevent overheating. It is well known that when MacBook Pro is connected to the external monitor, the GPU gets involved and the system heats up.
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