F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Issue with turbo boost system Malfunction detected in performance enhancement component

Issue with turbo boost system Malfunction detected in performance enhancement component

Issue with turbo boost system Malfunction detected in performance enhancement component

T
Totsi356
Junior Member
15
01-20-2026, 01:57 PM
#1
I've checked my Lenovo G50-70 laptop setup: it runs Intel Core i3 4030U at 1.9 GHz, has 16 GB LPDDR3 RAM, a 240 GB SATA 3 SSD paired with a 1 TB SATA 3 Toshiba HDD, an AMD Radeon R5 M230 discrete GPU, and the Lenovo Lancer 5A2 (U3E1) motherboard. Recently, my non-turbo boostable processor now shows this feature enabled in HWinfo. I'm also having trouble turning on virtualization, despite updating BIOS and disabling Hyper-V support in Windows. No one seems to know how to resolve this issue. Please help quickly.
T
Totsi356
01-20-2026, 01:57 PM #1

I've checked my Lenovo G50-70 laptop setup: it runs Intel Core i3 4030U at 1.9 GHz, has 16 GB LPDDR3 RAM, a 240 GB SATA 3 SSD paired with a 1 TB SATA 3 Toshiba HDD, an AMD Radeon R5 M230 discrete GPU, and the Lenovo Lancer 5A2 (U3E1) motherboard. Recently, my non-turbo boostable processor now shows this feature enabled in HWinfo. I'm also having trouble turning on virtualization, despite updating BIOS and disabling Hyper-V support in Windows. No one seems to know how to resolve this issue. Please help quickly.

K
kingpie64
Member
144
01-20-2026, 08:05 PM
#2
When the CPU lacks boost support, measurements may be unreliable. Use CPU-Z to check speeds. Learn more about virtualization here: https://support.lenovo.com/us/en/solutions/ht500006
K
kingpie64
01-20-2026, 08:05 PM #2

When the CPU lacks boost support, measurements may be unreliable. Use CPU-Z to check speeds. Learn more about virtualization here: https://support.lenovo.com/us/en/solutions/ht500006

S
seriosh
Member
181
01-22-2026, 11:20 AM
#3
You're asking for clarification on what you meant by the statement. It seems you're referring to disabling or enabling hardware virtualization settings, possibly in BIOS. You mentioned trying a virtualization software and suspecting conflicts with Hyper-V or VirtualBox. The advice is to check BIOS options for hardware virtualization and enable it if needed, avoiding any interference between tools like Hyper-V and VirtualBox.
S
seriosh
01-22-2026, 11:20 AM #3

You're asking for clarification on what you meant by the statement. It seems you're referring to disabling or enabling hardware virtualization settings, possibly in BIOS. You mentioned trying a virtualization software and suspecting conflicts with Hyper-V or VirtualBox. The advice is to check BIOS options for hardware virtualization and enable it if needed, avoiding any interference between tools like Hyper-V and VirtualBox.