this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2023
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I had been having issues with my udm pro running hot and frequently overheating and powering off. It is out of warranty now and I wouldn't give ubiquity another dime but want to avoid replacing my network stack for as long as possible.

I was consistently running around 58-59c which I thought was hot but most things I read said it was fine. The problem was at increasingly more frequent intervals my network would go down and I would go to the data closet and would see "Ready to Power Off". Inspecting the logs after a reboot showed spikes to 102 before a shutdown was triggered. Most infuriating was that it wouldn't shut down but sit at the "Ready to Power Off" with fans at 100% and still hot.

I finally decided to replace the pads like I had read about other users doing. Upon inspection the existing pads seemed fine with one exception...

THERE WAS NO THERMAL PAD ON THE CPU!

Somehow they had put one on the 4 memory chips below the CPU, and one on top of the aluminum heatsink to presumably use the case as a thermal mass, but had somehow totally missed the damn processor! I have pics but they wouldn't upload. That means there was about a 2mm complete air gap between the heatsink and processor because I had to use a 3mm pad. I really don't know how it worked at all for the last few years.

Well gee, my temps are now in the mid 40s and it hasn't powered itself off since.

If anyone has an out of warranty UDM Pro that is running hot, you might want to open it up and check the pads. You will need 3mm for the processor and 4 mm for the chips and top of heatsink.

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[–] TechNerdWizard42@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago

This is not what we mean by an airgapped network...

[–] CameronDev@programming.dev 5 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Thats kinda suprising that it worked for so long.

Is stuff that runs way too hot just a general thing that ubi does? My cloud key 2 is uncomfortable to touch, im sure its going to burn itself out.

[–] Vetinari@reddthat.com 2 points 11 months ago

I'm surprised it did as well. It even ran well for over a year before it started overheating and powering off

[–] Grandsinge@lemmy.zip 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Ubiquity has always felt a bit shoddy and hacked together. Reminds me of the bad USB sticks in the NVR or the shitty G4 doorbells that would die after 18-24 months from a bad converter board.

[–] Vetinari@reddthat.com 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I did all my homework and it looked like they were a great prosumer network company. I didn't see any negative reports... Until a week after I paid for it all. Then everything started going downhill. I wouldn't give them any more of my money. Once this stuff dies I'm moving on to something else.

[–] Stowaway@midwest.social 1 points 11 months ago

They seem like they would be good, but the more Ive experienced them the less I like them.

My USG can't get past 250mbps, probably thermal as well. The cloud keys are shotty at best. They build that to make it difficult to disassemble and service. They lock you into their crap software ecosystem that then requires their hardware. Ive setup 2 poe switches and both were warped and have excessive thermals compared to my much larger poe switches.

I am starting to call ubiquiti fauxsumer products...