F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Adjust voltage settings on your Intel Core i7 9750H processor.

Adjust voltage settings on your Intel Core i7 9750H processor.

Adjust voltage settings on your Intel Core i7 9750H processor.

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SkyAceDivine
Member
208
07-13-2016, 12:33 AM
#1
Use the Intel Extreme Tuning Utility to adjust settings. Try changing core voltage offset values from -0.165 to -0.125. After some changes, the temperature remains high at 94°C even with full load. Check if you should modify the turbo boost power max setting as well. Your system is running with 60W turbo boost and 90W short power max.
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SkyAceDivine
07-13-2016, 12:33 AM #1

Use the Intel Extreme Tuning Utility to adjust settings. Try changing core voltage offset values from -0.165 to -0.125. After some changes, the temperature remains high at 94°C even with full load. Check if you should modify the turbo boost power max setting as well. Your system is running with 60W turbo boost and 90W short power max.

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dniz24
Junior Member
15
07-13-2016, 02:38 AM
#2
Use the Intel Extreme Tuning Utility to adjust settings. Try changing core voltage offset values and check if temperatures drop. After some attempts, you're still seeing high temps around 94°C despite setting boost limits. Make sure turbo boost power max is correctly configured and consider updating your BIOS if needed. Your system has an i7 9750h, RTX 2060, and 16GB RAM.
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dniz24
07-13-2016, 02:38 AM #2

Use the Intel Extreme Tuning Utility to adjust settings. Try changing core voltage offset values and check if temperatures drop. After some attempts, you're still seeing high temps around 94°C despite setting boost limits. Make sure turbo boost power max is correctly configured and consider updating your BIOS if needed. Your system has an i7 9750h, RTX 2060, and 16GB RAM.

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SamlikesHam04
Junior Member
9
07-16-2016, 08:51 PM
#3
Are you confirming the voltage deviation is real? Are temperatures lower than expected or higher than normal? The 8th and 9th gen models tend to run hot unless cooling is adequate, so you're facing a thermal constraint. Keep an eye on CPU power consumption—run HWinfo64 alongside XTU for better insights. On a throttled 8750H, I easily hit -100mV on core, cache, and SA, which reduced power draw by roughly 7-8W under load. You might need to spend time refurbishing your laptop or consider liquid metalling if you can't achieve the desired results. Personally, I went that route and my CPU and GPU temperatures stayed in the 80s.
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SamlikesHam04
07-16-2016, 08:51 PM #3

Are you confirming the voltage deviation is real? Are temperatures lower than expected or higher than normal? The 8th and 9th gen models tend to run hot unless cooling is adequate, so you're facing a thermal constraint. Keep an eye on CPU power consumption—run HWinfo64 alongside XTU for better insights. On a throttled 8750H, I easily hit -100mV on core, cache, and SA, which reduced power draw by roughly 7-8W under load. You might need to spend time refurbishing your laptop or consider liquid metalling if you can't achieve the desired results. Personally, I went that route and my CPU and GPU temperatures stayed in the 80s.

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Ryancraftdu05
Junior Member
31
07-17-2016, 03:52 AM
#4
It functions though it carries some risk. If you're comfortable with that, remember to use the throttle stop carefully.
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Ryancraftdu05
07-17-2016, 03:52 AM #4

It functions though it carries some risk. If you're comfortable with that, remember to use the throttle stop carefully.

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xxxLazersxxx
Member
117
07-20-2016, 04:35 AM
#5
Undervolting offers genuine benefits without risk, unlike overclocking. It provides substantial speed gains if you consider it carefully.
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xxxLazersxxx
07-20-2016, 04:35 AM #5

Undervolting offers genuine benefits without risk, unlike overclocking. It provides substantial speed gains if you consider it carefully.

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KhaleDx
Junior Member
41
07-20-2016, 09:39 AM
#6
To some extent, but operating under voltage might lead to instability if your PSU and motherboard aren't consistent or dependable. Without a stable power source, it could trigger power delivery spikes, making the system unreliable or even risky.
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KhaleDx
07-20-2016, 09:39 AM #6

To some extent, but operating under voltage might lead to instability if your PSU and motherboard aren't consistent or dependable. Without a stable power source, it could trigger power delivery spikes, making the system unreliable or even risky.

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aleeex2006
Junior Member
13
07-21-2016, 02:49 PM
#7
What voltage are you receiving? Also, is this a laptop? If it is, then the size of the laptop might be a bigger concern, so keep track of what you're using it for.
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aleeex2006
07-21-2016, 02:49 PM #7

What voltage are you receiving? Also, is this a laptop? If it is, then the size of the laptop might be a bigger concern, so keep track of what you're using it for.

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Ez_YANELGO_XD
Junior Member
10
07-21-2016, 03:02 PM
#8
if you don't have good power delivery that risk is always present, not just when undervolting. I think we're maybe derailing this thread a little, though
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Ez_YANELGO_XD
07-21-2016, 03:02 PM #8

if you don't have good power delivery that risk is always present, not just when undervolting. I think we're maybe derailing this thread a little, though

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nickydebreker
Junior Member
43
07-27-2016, 08:30 AM
#9
Well actually, it seems both of us might be right to some extent.
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nickydebreker
07-27-2016, 08:30 AM #9

Well actually, it seems both of us might be right to some extent.

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Winner
Member
242
08-13-2016, 03:12 PM
#10
yes this is laptop i change the power setting also in intel extreme tuning utility now getting 80 max on 100% load before it was boost power max set to 60w and turbo boost short power max 90w on default settings is this safe to change power settings ?
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Winner
08-13-2016, 03:12 PM #10

yes this is laptop i change the power setting also in intel extreme tuning utility now getting 80 max on 100% load before it was boost power max set to 60w and turbo boost short power max 90w on default settings is this safe to change power settings ?