My fans don't speed up until 95degrees celsius on MBP 15 2012 non-retina, why?

I recently upgraded my laptop from a mbp 15 2.2ghz late 2011 to mbp 15 2.3ghz mid 2012. After I installed iStat menu I noticed that my fans speed increase only after the processor gets 95 degrees celsius (until 95 stays at 2000rpm); when it gets to 100 fans are only at 3500rpm; on my old mac I didn't have this problem (ex: at 70degrees C fans where at 3500rpm...never went beyond 90degrees celsius). I don't think that any temperature over 85 degrees C is good for the processor, not to mention at 100 (my cpu model support max 105 until damage). What can I do? Is there a problem with my mac or is a common problem to this 2012 model? Thank you!

This doesn't sound right.  Have you tried Resetting the System Management Controller ?
Failing that, I would take it in for service.
charlie

Similar Messages

  • Macbook air cpu charge is lower than 5%, but temperature is more than 90°C and fans don't speed up ! is it normal ?

    hello,
    my macbook air cpu charge is lower than 5% (i.e. no apps are loaded only the finder, istat menu give me a cpu charge near 3%),
    but temperature is more than 90°C and fans don't speed up !
    is it normal ?

    It is degrees C.
    when the computer has a normal behavour with no CPU charge, its temp is about 35°C
    but sometimes temp increase to 90°C and more.
    because i don't heard the fan speed increasing (I almost don't heard the fan so i think they should stay at 2000rpm), I'm afraid to burn the CPU and shut down the mac
    i didn't let him get hotter.

  • Spinning beach ball of death after crash with fans running full speed

    I recently put my machine to sleep - came in the next morning to find it running all fans at full speed and frozen. Did a hard reset (power button in for 5 seconds waited 15 secs and then power on. It rebooted after a long re-boot period. Since then it has slowed down. Many apps take an age to open. Many freeze and there is the infamous SBoD. I have rebuilt permissions, installed 10.5.8 combo, done a permission repair from a separate firewire disk, run onyx - which at time never ends and has to be aborted. Activity monitor shows no exceptional activity when the SBoD is running. I had significant issues until last December when i did a clean rebuild and installation of leopard and put all essential software in from clean install disks - all in all had a pristine machine which was working perfectly until the week before last when the full fan and freeze crash occurred. I notice that it speeded up after the 10.5.8 combo install and permission rebuild from external disk but gradually slows down and gets increasingly unstable requiring forced reboots more and more often. I have no hacks or other background processes other than Virus Barrier 6 which ran perfectly before the crash.

    As expected after running well at about 11:40 Mail slowed down and the SBoD started.
    The console shows the following:
    19/2/10 11:40:00 AM [0x0-0x6d06d].org.mozilla.firefox[4570] Debugger() was called!
    19/2/10 11:42:42 AM [0x0-0x6f06f].com.apple.Safari[4671] Debugger() was called!
    19/2/10 11:55:22 AM Automator Runner[5082] Error while processing arguments
    19/2/10 11:56:47 AM Automator Runner[5130] Error while processing arguments
    19/2/10 12:06:08 PM Automator Runner[5420] Error while processing arguments
    19/2/10 12:06:54 PM com.apple.launchd[378] (com.apple.Safari[5451]) Check-in of Mach service failed. PID 5451 is not privileged: com.apple.Safari.SyncClient.IsRunning
    19/2/10 12:06:54 PM com.apple.launchd[378] (com.apple.Safari[5451]) Exited with exit code: 1
    19/2/10 12:07:22 PM Mail[5429] Expected Apple Mail To Do to be selected for Operation "UID STORE", EXECUTING <0x179e47e0>
    Dependency: Operation "DONE", DONE <0x17f1c1e0>
    Dependency: Operation "IDLE", DONE <0x1843e0b0>
    Dependency: Operation "SELECT", DONE <0x17f22ee0>
    Mailbox name: Apple Mail To Do
    Mailbox name: Apple Mail To Do, had IMAPMailbox INBOX:
    EXISTS:32, UIDNEXT:5553, UIDVALIDITY:1226484816 instead
    19/2/10 12:12:41 PM Quicksilver[425] * -[NSCFString string]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0xd4abe0
    19/2/10 12:12:41 PM Quicksilver[425] HIToolbox: ignoring exception '* -[NSCFString string]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0xd4abe0' that raised inside Carbon event dispatch
    19/2/10 12:12:41 PM Quicksilver[425] HIToolbox: ignoring exception '* -[NSCFString string]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0xd4abe0' that raised inside Carbon event dispatch

  • IMac Overheats & Fans Won't Speed up to Cool

    I have a 2007 iMac that for some reason the fans won't speed up above idle and so if it's put to heavy use eventually it will overheat and shutdown. It was a while before I had installed software that measured temperatures of devices or fan speeds inside the iMac and then determine what was happening and that indeed the iMac would shut off when the power supply got too hot.
    Then I found some of these apps that let you control the fan speed manually or customize the threshold and with some of these I was able to speed the fans up. The one I chose as the best was Derman's version of Fan Control, a control panel which is automatic and effectively keeps all the temperatures normal and has been my solution to the problem. Many people seem to like SmcFanControl for some reason but I don't because it's crude and  totally manual in setting the base fan speed which keeps the fan running higher than normal all the time but doesn't help much to cool if the iMac gets really hot unless you manually speed up the fan more.
    The whole thing baffles me. Why can this control panel speed up and control the fans just fine and effectively cool the iMac but left to it's default control it does nothing and allows the iMac to overheat? And has anyone had this problem and found a way to fix it?

    As you have already noted, the problem with SMCFanControl is that it only sets a higher minimum speed which leaves the user to have to manually ramp it up (or define a higher preset for various level tasks) when running something that will tax the CPU.  Cooler idle speeds will do little to extend the life of your computer.  My new Quad-Core i7 Mac Mini idles at a cool 110-115 degrees Fahrenheit (yes, that is COOL in computer terms to those that think it's hot because a day in Arizona at that temperature feels very hot). 
    Manual control is better than nothing if you know you're going to play a game or encode a file, but it stinks if you have a batch of files and you leave the room and it finishes and your fan keeps needlessly running at higher speeds (possibly for days if you left on a trip and left a list of videos to convert while you're gone).  I've left feedback on SMCFan's web site, but perhaps having an upper limit is beyond the author's capability?
    Derman's Fan Control has exactly the features needed, but sadly it hasn't been updated since 2007 as far as I can tell (Leopard Era) and thus may not be suitable for a newer Mac running Mountain Lion (the preference pane is also not 64-bit).  iMacs and Macbook Pros all have different fan setups for different equipment and my Mac Mini has its own case fan.  In my case, a Quad i7 will quickly reach 180+ degrees Fahrenheit or hotter when encoding with Handbrake at full speed.  Apple's own fan FINALLY kicks in beyond a smidgen at around 90C/190F, but it doesn't reach near full speed until it gets hotter yet (it seems content to let the CPUs roast at 90C/190F; I think Intel's automatic throttle is at 105C/221F, so perhaps Apple thinks that 90 is perfectly fine.  I'll admit the case isn't super hot or anything, but the concern should be the shelf life of the CPU and other components in the computer, not whether it will run at that temperture for weeks or months or even a year or two. 
    My PowerMac Digital Audio PPC tower (upgraded to 1.8GHz/1.5GB with dual 1.5TB Sata drives and used as a whole house audio/video server for over 6 years on nearly 24/7 and god knows how much before I bought it used in 2006) still works fine (case fan is starting to get a bit noisier, but still functions and the machine was on 24/7/365 for the most part!  It was built in 2001!  That's 11 years with no component failures and over 4 years 24/7 on the 1.5TB drives).  I'd like my new Mac Mini Quad i7 to last at least half that long.
    In short, there aren't many good solutions because no on has bothered (or at least bothered to update) a good fan control for the Mac.  I found a fan control program to run in Windows on my Macbook Pro and it has no configurable options, but automatically ramps at a very good set of default temperatures  and so it's just set to automatically run at startup and forget (I wish I could say the same about OSX; Apple's defaults seem to be set for quiet operation with little thought about longevity).
    I'd gladly pay a few bucks to have a good quality fan control program in OSX that is up-to-date, 64-bit and works fine with my new computer in Mountain Lion.  It's a shame I can't seem to find one to buy.

  • IMac fan runs full speed on shut down

    Hi Everyone, this has probably been discussed before, but I may have some new information to add that could interest the tech savvy people out there.
    My iMac runs perfectly fine; more or less as it did when it was new. In OS X, when I shut down the computer, the fan runs at full speed indefinitely, unless I unplug it or boot back up.  When running, the fan is perfectly normal (increases speed a bit when doing something taxing).  I've never heard it at full speed before until this started happening.  After following the SMC reset procedure with no luck (I'd like to add that the SMC reset only says it relates to fan problems when the computer is ON), I searched a bit and noticed there are one or two cases where a problem like mine was believed to be a motherboard issue, and therefore a costly fix.
    However, here's the fun part. When booted into Windows 8.1, shutting down the iMac does not cause this issue to occur.  It stays silent, as it should, even if I disconnect then reconnect the power.  This leads me to believe it's unlikely to be a motherboard issue.  However I've wiped, restored, and reinstalled fresh copies of Mountain Lion, Mavericks, and Windows 8.1, and the result is still the same: if I don't want to have to unplug it from the wall, then I have to use Windows to shut it down.
    So then, my questions are these:
    -What is the difference between shutting down from OS X and shutting down from Windows?
    -Is an operating system allowed/able to touch BIOS settings?
    -Is it possible to still be a hardware problem, given this difference?
    My default OS is OS X, and it makes no difference if I change that to Windows.  I also did a PRAM reset, even though that has nothing to do with fans...
    I'd certainly like to avoid a costly repair, if it's just something that a future software update will fix.
    Thanks in advance!
    -Jon
    iMac 27", Late 2012, 3.4GHz i7, 3TB Fusion Drive, 16 GB, OS X 10.9.4

    Hey, thanks for the response.
    The "Startup after power failure" option was not checked.
    I'll try the Extended Hardware test when I get some spare time again - probably tomorrow night.  After that I suppose it is time to either take it in for service/diagnosis, or just keep using Windows to shut it down.  Sleep mode is unfortunately not an option because it eventually goes into hibernate state, which has the same problem as turning off.  I don't like to leave the computer on all night, just from a power-conscious point of view (but yes, I know today's iMacs use very little power). I have it on a power bar now, so I just flick the switch off when I power down. It's not bad as a temporary solution - perhaps permanent if the shop says they have to replace the motherboard.
    As for contacting Apple... I had a 1-hour conversation with them about my iCloud account, because it suddenly stopped working on this Forum site (hence the new account with no points).  Anytime I sign in, it forwards me to the "page not found" error page.  This happens even if I sign in on the apple store then click over to here.  If my login info has an open session, then Discussions just doesn't work.  They were completely baffled (understandably), because the account works on iTunes, iCloud.com, Apple store, and everywhere except Discussions.  I was on the phone with them for over an hour - and the kicker is, even after telling them the same thing happens in other browsers, from other computers, they actually forwarded me to the iMac team.  This is when I lost faith in Apple support.  When one of the staff asked why I don't just phone about the issue, instead of trying to get access to the forums just to post about it, I told them I didn't want to pay $50/hr (or whatever the insane rate is for Mac hardware issues), only to be put on hold and sent around between departments, just to be told I need to send it in for service, which I'm probably not going to do if it's the motherboard.  They never did get back to me about my account issue...
    Anyway, sorry for the rant, I'll keep you posted about the hardware test and more SMC resets.

  • My fan runs continuously on high until I click my mouse every morning.

    How do I fix this?  Every morning when I get up I hear my MacPro fan at full speed until I click on my mouse and wake it up.  Then everything is normal.
    What do I do to stop this?

    smc reset???

  • Laptop Fan not increasing speed

    I was having very bad heating problems with my pc it would tend to go off all the tkme when it overheated, i decided to blow into the fan and dust came out. It continued to work perfectly untill last night when it continued to overheat, I checked on the Internet and I found I just had to clean the fan so I opened up my laptop this morning and cleaned the fan. But now the fan will not speed up if the temperature is high before it would and make horrible noises, now the fan is on but does not changes its speed when the cpu is heating!I have tried alot of freeware that increases the fan speed but the fan cannot be detected, but the fan is still on and idle. I opened up the laptop 3 times to check if everything was connected and they are but what could be the issue?? Please help my laptop is my life at the moment.

    PcDyson77 wrote:
    I was having very bad heating problems with mypc it would tend to go off all thetkme when it overheated, i decided to blow into the fan and dust came out. It continued to work perfectlyuntill last night when it continued to overheat, I checked on the Internet and I found I just had to clean the fan so I opened up my laptop this morning and cleaned the fan. But now the fan will not speed up if the temperature is high before it would and make horrible noises, now the fan is on but does not changes its speed when the cpu is heating!I have triedalot of freeware that increases the fan speed but the fan cannot be detected, but the fan is still on and idle. I opened up the laptop 3 times to check if everything was connected and they are but what could be the issue?? Please help my laptop is my life at the moment.This sounds like your fan need to be replaced. A fan on idle and not turning right? It should be constantly turning not idling...and only speed up when the Laptop tells it to speed up to dissipate the heat from the heat sink as heat rises. If it isn't doing this then the fan is failing.

  • Classic makes fans run full speed

    I think this is new. When I run Classic my fans run full speed (10.4.8 G5 iMac 20") with any of the kid's games. I've done the SMU reset, blown dust from vents, tried different power settings. I think blowing out the dust reduced fan use in OS X, but not in classic.
    Thermograph data suggests the fans are behaving appropriately, so I think the system is running hotter than in the past. Anyone have other ideas? Anyone else seeing this classic behavior?

    Have a look at one post I made some months ago :
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=1621311#1621311
    I discovered that going back to Classic from one user to the other make a large use of CPU (80 to 90%) thus rising the temperature and conversly the fan...
    If you open classic in one enironnment that's not true. Check it with Acivity Monitor.
    Hope this helps.
    JfS

  • MacBook pro won't power up! Acting asleep, black screen, fans don't fire up. Light nr catch pulsing, have taken batt out and reset but still blank screen, help!!

    MacBook pro won't power up! Acting asleep, black screen, fans don't fire up. Light nr catch pulsing, have taken batt out and reset but still blank screen, help!!

    You may want to try this.
    Solution A
    Start up your MBP while pressing Option (alt)|, Command, P, R until your hear 3 chimes rather than 2 as indicated by apple. This worked for me the first time.
    Solution B
    Start your MBP while pressing Option (alt), Command, S
    Hold until you see the computer automatic routine. When it finally stops type the following followed by "return":
    fsck -fy
    It will probably indicate some problem related to "pcscd.pub" (should be 16 instead of 17). I haven't figured out what this means but somewhere in the Internet i read it is related to scan cards...
    More importantly this routine will fix any problems with your HDD similarily to disk repair. When it ends, it will tell you if it has fixed/modified anything. If it has, run the routine again by typing again "fsck -fy"
    Lastly, reboot by typing "reboot" (followed by "return")
    Solution C
    Start up your MBP while pressing option (alt), command, S
    hold keys until you see computer commands scrolling
    when the routine stops type the following, each line followed by the "return" key:
    mount -uw /
    chmod 775 /
    chmod 1775 /
    reboot
    After which your computer should reboot on it's own.
    Each of the above has worked for me at one time or another. Once your computer has rebooted from the DVD you can reinstall OS X. If your problems started after installing 10.5.6, then I don't suggest updating until 10.5.5.
    I'm very very disappointed with my 2007 MBP, it started to give me problems after 1 year. had to change the HDD and lately when I isntalled 10.5.6 it suddenly refused to start up., My previous Mac laptop (2003 866Mhz) worked for 4 years without a hitch. Ironically I've had to use it to access the internet and find solutions for my current MBP.
    best of luck

  • MacBook 2007: 104°C and fan beyond maximum speed!

    Hello.
    2 years ago I bought this MacBook Late 2007 2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo model. It wasn't new though it worked like it should. I use my MacBook nearly every day for at least 6 hours a day. It has OS X 10.6.8 and Windows 7 running nicely on my SSD, so there's no complaining about it's speed as it still just feels new.
    It has one big problem though. As I use my MacBook for watching videos, listening to music and gaming etc., my MacBook always runs very hot (~80-100°C). This became a standard for the last few months. When I turn on my MacBook it's processor about 15°C hotter than room temperature. Though it only warms up when actually doing something, this normally lasts for a minute because I'll start using it immediately. Right now I'm typing this question, my MacBook is 58°C. Safari has 2 tabs open, and iTunes is running in the background. The fan is running at 4500rp/m. This is the lowest temperature I can achieve while using the MacBook. When I first bought this MacBook it would run at 30°C while using it. Now it's around 60°C.
    When it's beyond 60°C the fans will start running to their maximum speed, which is 6200rp/m. However this month I started to notice something that I consider dangerous. My Core 2 Duo reaches 104°C while watching a 480p video! That's 1 degree away from turning off. I know that MacBooks are designed to run at these temperatures, but actually acieving this temperature on watching a video or playing a two-dimensional game is just rediculous.
    I'm pretty sure it has something to do with the thermal paste, and though I'm specialized in these kind of things, I don't want to screw up the MacBook. It runs super fast because of the SSD. Buying me a new MacBook would be a total loss of money since it still performs very well.
    I've tried tools like SMCFanControl. Of course it doesn't help because any CPU will warm up when doing intensive tasks. I don't find it helpful.
    Lastly, the fan's maximum speed is officially 6200rp/m. Mine reaches 7600rp/m (this is the fan that came with my MacBook. Not a custom one.) and after a short period of time it shuts off. After a second or two it'll turn on again. When this happens it's at 104°C.
    Any advice?
    Thanks in advance!.

    I have essentially the same computer and I'm wondering if perhaps your fan is failing? That could explain some of the odd behaviors and readings you're seeing!
    My computer typically runs at 70C when I'm using it (I'll have Chrome open with several tabs, at least one of which has a lot of Flash content) and the fan runs around 6200 rpm.
    Streaming videos always brings up the temperature to levels similar to what you're seeing - and I believe it's always done that. I can't recall a time when it didn't.
    Could you give the link for some of the videos you watch that are causing the fan speed and temperature to increase? I'll try them on my machine and see if it exhibits the same behavior.
    Also, keep in mind that many sites that stream videos or have games on them use Adobe's Flash plugin, which is terrible on OS X. It will ramp up the CPU usage to an incredible degree, which in turn means the temperature and fan speed will go up.
    ~Lyssa

  • IMac fans running full speed constantly.

    A few days ago my iMac's fans started running at full speed, which they very rarely do. Now every time I turn on my computer after about a minute the fans reach full speed, I'm only opening Google Chrome, Twitter, iTunes and Coversutra which has never caused the fans to run before.
    I've downloaded a program to monitor temperatures of various parts of the iMac but nothing is getting hot enough to cause the fans to run at full speed.
    I have reset the SMC and PRAM multiple times which hasn't fixed the issue. I've run the Apple Hardware Test on the original install disks which gave an issue number relating to the fact that the fans are running on full speed.. surprise surprise...
    The computer isn't very old, was purchased almost to this date in 2009. It's an 8,1 iMac with a 20" screen. 4GB RAM and a 2.4Ghz processor.
    Would be extremely appreciative if anyone has any idea how to fix this problem.

    Get free iStat Pro. This code is obviously related to the HD, but I don't know if it necessarily means the HD is failing. It will show the fan rpms to see which fan is revving up. If it's only the HD fan that is climbing up, this may be related to the HD temperature sensor being faulty. Thing is, the sensor is probably integrated into the drive, so if it's only that that's failing, it will still involve replacing the drive.
    http://www.islayer.com/apps/istatpro/
    Also, run the demo of SMART utility to check out your drive.
    http://www.volitans-software.com/smart_utility.php
    What does it say for SMART Status for the drive in Disk Utility?

  • Fans running full speed after hard drive replacement

    I have a 24" aluminum iMac (iMac7,1) which had a hard drive failure. I replaced the hard drive myself and all went well. However, now my fans are running full speed. This appears to be because of a problem with detecting my temperature sensors now. During the install I only touched two temp. sensors, the hard drive sensor and the LCD sensor. I made special care to make sure I got the sensors back in place.
    Using iStat Pro the only temp. sensors I have readings for are the Hard Drive and Power Supply. I am missing ambient, optical drive, CPU, and display. Out of those the only one out of the missing ones I touched are the display one. I have since gone back into the machine to ensure the LCD temp. sensor was fully connected and to ensure the HD one was connected (although that one is working).
    What is really strange is the ambient sensor appears to be a diode on the main board so I really don't see a way I could have messed that one up. Also, I didn't touch the CPU sensor (didn't even see it), nor did I touch the optical sensor.
    Anyway I have tried:
    PRAM reset
    SMC reset
    went back into the box to make sure all temp sensors where in place.
    I am out of troubleshooting ideas. Can anyone provide additional insight?

    Mechanic man thanks for the response.
    Besides for the fan noise the machine is running like a champ. The new hard drive seems to be fine, actually my machine boots up faster now than it ever did (faster drive I suppose). I ran disk utility and did a verify on the new disk and it didn't detect any problems.
    The fans run at full speed immediately at power-on (maybe a one second pause). I first noticed it when I booted up from the startup disk to do a time machine restore. So yes, it occurs when booting from a system disk.
    I have been unable to run Apple Hardware Test, I saw this step in some google searching and Apple docs but I don't seem to have AHT on any disk. I have tried putting the Snow Leopard disk in and holding "d" at boot time to no affect. I did some further reading and found that AHT may only be included on disks that come with the machine. I am going to try to dig up my Tiger disks and see if I can get AHT to run from there (10.4 was the factory installed OS when I bought my iMac).
    I am also considering trying to re-install SMC firmware (http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2368). Even though it will be the same version at least I know the SMC reset has taken place.
    Since the fans run full speed right at start up that suggests to me that it is a physical hardware problem (i.e. something wrong with the sensors) or a firmware issue. I am leaning toward firmware.

  • "Don't load tabs until selected" ... Where is the setting so that it affects the tabs when I click "Open all in tabs" from History?

    I am trying to reload all the tabs from history, it's a couple thousand. I am not concerned about system RAM I have 16GB. I know it will be slow, I'm not looking for any warnings or questions about why I have to reload that many tabs or how to work with the restore.bak sessionstore files.
    The question I need an answer to is, "What setting do I need to change so that when I reload multiple tabs, it doesn't say "connecting" on all of them even though I have already selected "Don't load tabs until selected"

    I think we both understand what you want. And we're both saying we are not aware of any built-in way to do this.

  • IMac G5 (no iSight) fans running full speed always

    Hi,
    The processor usage is relatively low (like 10%) but the fans are full speed at all times from the second the power comes on. I imagine there isa problem with the mother board? I've tried resetting all the SMC stuff, no effect.
    Any ideas?
    Is this something Apple Stores will charge to fix?
    Thanks

    It could be either faulty, leaking caps, or a failing power supply unit. Yes, Apple will charge since you are long out of warranty. You can open the machine and check the caps yourself, they look like little soda cans, and their tops should be perfectly flat and there should be no exudate.
    Let us know what you find,

  • "Don't load tabs until selected" option no longer there?

    I have installed a new version of Firefox (long overdue) from version 17 to 31. I was able to customize everything to my liking after some fiddling around but one setting remains that I cannot rectify. Firefox's options menu no longer seems to include the "Don't load tabs until selected" checkbox as can be seen in this screenshot
    (https://i.stack.imgur.com/JWAXX.png)
    on the SuperUser forum in this thread:
    (https://superuser.com/questions/433096/how-do-i-make-firefox-13-load-all-my-tabs-on-startup-or-when-resuming-reload)
    This wouldn't be a problem for me if the option was off by default, but it seems to be on. I have tried to find the correct technical setting for this in the about:config menu as per suggestion of one of the threads on the Firefox Support forum.
    (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/987254?esab=a&as=aaq)
    Unfortunately, "browser.tabs.loadDivertedInBackground" - which I have set to "true" - does not seem to work, even after restarting Firefox, nor does "browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInBackground".
    Please help! I will be very, very grateful if all my tabs load immediately and at the same time again upon opening my browser; a practice many users over the years seem to disagree with.

    Start Firefox in <u>[[Safe Mode|Safe Mode]]</u> to check if one of the extensions (Firefox/Tools > Add-ons > Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem.
    *Switch to the DEFAULT theme: Firefox/Tools > Add-ons > Appearance
    *Do NOT click the Reset button on the Safe Mode start window
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Safe+Mode
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Troubleshooting+extensions+and+themes

Maybe you are looking for