F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Battery removal causes CPU throttling in laptops.

Battery removal causes CPU throttling in laptops.

Battery removal causes CPU throttling in laptops.

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Windlander
Member
150
07-11-2016, 01:28 PM
#11
The latest BIOS is already installed, so I’ll just format it. I’m taking out the laptop battery now.
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Windlander
07-11-2016, 01:28 PM #11

The latest BIOS is already installed, so I’ll just format it. I’m taking out the laptop battery now.

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RasierShampoo
Member
216
07-23-2016, 12:51 AM
#12
I should ask have you observed any actual performance degradation as a result of this apparent under clock? I'm curious if it might just be a bug that it is boosting but not reporting it. Did you do any kind of CPU benchmark like Cinebench R20 both with and without battery then noted the score? If the scores are dramatically different then there's a real problem here. If the scores are ~identical then Windows just isn't reporting the CPU clock correctly for some reason when the battery is disconnected but your performance is otherwise unhindered.
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RasierShampoo
07-23-2016, 12:51 AM #12

I should ask have you observed any actual performance degradation as a result of this apparent under clock? I'm curious if it might just be a bug that it is boosting but not reporting it. Did you do any kind of CPU benchmark like Cinebench R20 both with and without battery then noted the score? If the scores are dramatically different then there's a real problem here. If the scores are ~identical then Windows just isn't reporting the CPU clock correctly for some reason when the battery is disconnected but your performance is otherwise unhindered.

E
exodyo
Junior Member
4
07-25-2016, 03:46 PM
#13
I'm curious about whether the PCB is built to draw current from the battery rather than the charging source. In terms of amps, how do the output amps of the battery compare to those of the charger?
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exodyo
07-25-2016, 03:46 PM #13

I'm curious about whether the PCB is built to draw current from the battery rather than the charging source. In terms of amps, how do the output amps of the battery compare to those of the charger?

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gamerfoust
Member
50
07-25-2016, 04:10 PM
#14
Everything seemed to lag and load issues were common. It didn’t work smoothly with Twitch 1080P60 or YouTube 1080P60, often showing only 10 frames per second. Because this started happening recently, I’m considering a fresh clean install of Windows.
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gamerfoust
07-25-2016, 04:10 PM #14

Everything seemed to lag and load issues were common. It didn’t work smoothly with Twitch 1080P60 or YouTube 1080P60, often showing only 10 frames per second. Because this started happening recently, I’m considering a fresh clean install of Windows.

C
Chromels
Member
197
08-03-2016, 04:00 AM
#15
Do you have an extra storage device available? You might want to set up an operating system there first, before replacing any existing one that could still work.
C
Chromels
08-03-2016, 04:00 AM #15

Do you have an extra storage device available? You might want to set up an operating system there first, before replacing any existing one that could still work.

K
khaledkb_
Senior Member
724
08-03-2016, 07:32 AM
#16
Sadly no, but the SSD is mostly free space, so formatting shouldn't be too slow—maybe around three hours total. Lol
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khaledkb_
08-03-2016, 07:32 AM #16

Sadly no, but the SSD is mostly free space, so formatting shouldn't be too slow—maybe around three hours total. Lol

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spickelmire
Junior Member
27
08-05-2016, 06:18 AM
#17
If it's empty you could shrink the partition and install Windows in the free space. That can get a little convoluted though and you really want to make sure you don't write over the wrong partition. If you've ever played with GNU/Linux before you could boot something like Ubuntu off a thumb drive. Then you can check if it boosts. In theory if the problem is at the hardware level a different OS entirely shouldn't change the situation. If it boosts again w/out the battery then a Windows reinstall should fix the problem.
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spickelmire
08-05-2016, 06:18 AM #17

If it's empty you could shrink the partition and install Windows in the free space. That can get a little convoluted though and you really want to make sure you don't write over the wrong partition. If you've ever played with GNU/Linux before you could boot something like Ubuntu off a thumb drive. Then you can check if it boosts. In theory if the problem is at the hardware level a different OS entirely shouldn't change the situation. If it boosts again w/out the battery then a Windows reinstall should fix the problem.

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