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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Notebook Hardware
Dell v. MBP heat tolerance
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<blockquote data-quote="BrianLachoreVPI" data-source="post: 1256900" data-attributes="member: 193366"><p>Just barely ;P</p><p></p><p>Seriously though - a car in direct sunlight can easily exceed 113ºF. I'd be curious to know what the constraining components are. The display is an excellent guess - not just the adhesive but perhaps the LCD materials. It appears from a casual google glance that most LCDs are rated up to 140ºF - but then most LCD's aren't the Apple displays. Who knows. I'm suddenly curious myself as to the difference in storage limits. Can't research right this second though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BrianLachoreVPI, post: 1256900, member: 193366"] Just barely ;P Seriously though - a car in direct sunlight can easily exceed 113ºF. I'd be curious to know what the constraining components are. The display is an excellent guess - not just the adhesive but perhaps the LCD materials. It appears from a casual google glance that most LCDs are rated up to 140ºF - but then most LCD's aren't the Apple displays. Who knows. I'm suddenly curious myself as to the difference in storage limits. Can't research right this second though. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Notebook Hardware
Dell v. MBP heat tolerance
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