High temperature reduction near 80°C
High temperature reduction near 80°C
ROCHOT" changing to "Yes". For illustration, during a Skyrim session today, my save loaded instantly but then I faced severe freezes every two seconds with audio delays. From discussions on forums, these crashes could stem from VRAM issues. I recognize this might relate to the mods I have installed, though similar problems appear in less demanding games like Overwatch when everything is set to low. My system details are listed below: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit, Intel Core i7 7700HQ @ 2.80GHz Kaby Lake 14nm, 8GB RAM (dual channel, 1197MHz), ASUSTeK X580VD graphics card, Intel HD Graphics 630, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050, ForceWare 442.74, 931GB storage, TOSHIBA MQ04ABF100 SATA drive, no optical disks detected, Audio Conexant SmartAudio HD.
Hello. Last week my laptop was dust cleaned and the CPU thermal paste refreshed. Recently, in XTU I observed my CPU throttling around 80°C. This seems to happen occasionally and only in XTU, while HWiNFO64 displays normal readings except for "IA
ROCHOT" changing to "Yes". For illustration, during a Skyrim session today, my save loaded instantly but then I faced severe freezes every two seconds with audio delays. From discussions on forums, these crashes could stem from VRAM issues. I recognize this might relate to the mods I have installed, though similar problems appear in less demanding games like Overwatch when everything is set to low. My system details are listed below: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit, Intel Core i7 7700HQ @ 2.80GHz Kaby Lake 14nm, 8GB RAM (dual channel, 1197MHz), ASUSTeK X580VD graphics card, Intel HD Graphics 630, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050, ForceWare 442.74, 931GB storage, TOSHIBA MQ04ABF100 SATA drive, no optical disks detected, Audio Conexant SmartAudio HD.
It's the 4GB version. About five months back, I attempted to update my BIOS using Asus EZ Flash—everything worked fine, though it could have been a poor decision. Could that have led to the current issue?
What issue are you facing? Please describe the problem so I can help.
Very improbable. Typically software patches resolve performance issues. Recheck RAM consumption. Consider dusting or cleaning the device.
You can't improve a flawed design. Based on my understanding of XPS models, Prochoot throttling occurs when the CPU power supply reaches 125*C, causing performance drops to avoid overheating the board. This happens due to inadequate board design and uncooled VRMs.
It's just been polished, but I'll attempt to refresh my profile again.