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Overheating...

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1.9K views 11 replies 7 participants last post by  YubGo2Adventure  
#1 ·
I have an older Hero 4, which I've used hundreds of times. Got a newer 10 a year or so ago, nothing but overheating problems. I've asked on the 10 fourm, no one wants to answer so I ask here:

Do the 11's, 12's, or 13's have the horrible overheating issues that the 10 does? I'm ready to throw this camera away, and if the newer Gopro's overheat, either go back to my trusty Hero 4 or change brands.
Thanks!
 
#11 ·
I bought a GoPro 13 Black as part of the Creator Edition, the bundle seemed to be a good deal ay 650$CAN for the whole kit. I cannot record more than 35min at 4K 60fps. I'm considering selling it on MarketPlace to buy one that doesn't overheats all the time. This thing have been designed with environment dissipation for heat like water or to be used only when it is cold outside. I use it to film my rides on my gravel bike and it doesn't work. I don't want to stop all the time and think I have to replace the battery when the message is about over heating. I also tried to remove the battery and connect the camera directly to an external battery pack, it does the same. And don't let me start on the Volta thing.
 
#12 ·
I like that you are a GoPro all the way.
I'm sure you have tattooed GoPro on you somewhere.
For me, when you have to compensate for a bad design, or like the other guy said, it was designed for water and skiing, if you look a brand that is not as known as Gopro but can make your life easier, for me, it is worth it to sell the whole thing and try one that don't overheat. ChatGPT found me 3 other brand that don't so I think I won't be able to get my money back in other way than MarketPlace to recover some of my money.
 
#5 ·
GoPro temp sensor was readjusted, they increased by a degree, but we stopped talking bout that years ago, gopro did correct the issue and found that shooting less sis better, that was their answer. like said not all experience overheating because we all do vids differently
 
#4 ·
You cant fix overheating I'm afraid - when you pack high power in a small physical frame its inevitable.
Your best bet is to cool the camera as much as you can.

Remember, these cameras were first designed to be used in action sports where you get plenty of good airflow as you move. Although GoPro and others now market them as being used in other scenarios, it doesn't mean they are suited - it's just a way of selling more units!

The only way to overcome this then is try to remove the heat source as much as possible, or add external cooling, for example:
  • Lower the capture settings/frame rate. This will not work the chipset as hard, hence produce less heat in the first instance.
  • Switch off settings you don't need. If the camera is stationary, there's no need for Hypersmooth stabilization, or GPS, etc
  • Try external cooling - an external fan or some airflow to help cool the camera
  • The battery is a source of heat, so remove it? Run the camera off of an external power source - even a power bank if possible. This creates some space in the camera, and another avenue for heat to escape through the side door opening......

Good luck!