F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Laptop switching between dedicated and integrated graphics while in games

Laptop switching between dedicated and integrated graphics while in games

Laptop switching between dedicated and integrated graphics while in games

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Fuddy
Junior Member
12
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#1
My Pavilion 17” with an i5-7300HQ processor, GeForce 1050 Ti (4GB) and HD Graphics 630 is experiencing frequent switching between the integrated and dedicated graphics cards. This causes significant performance issues in games—resulting in choppy gameplay, dropped frames, and occasional freezes. I’ve attempted the following troubleshooting steps: reinstalling drivers, using older driver versions, investigating thermal throttling, disabling integrated graphics through Device Manager (which created instability), updating Windows, and removing Intel drivers. Despite having a capable laptop for general tasks, I'm at a loss; any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
F
Fuddy
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #1

My Pavilion 17” with an i5-7300HQ processor, GeForce 1050 Ti (4GB) and HD Graphics 630 is experiencing frequent switching between the integrated and dedicated graphics cards. This causes significant performance issues in games—resulting in choppy gameplay, dropped frames, and occasional freezes. I’ve attempted the following troubleshooting steps: reinstalling drivers, using older driver versions, investigating thermal throttling, disabling integrated graphics through Device Manager (which created instability), updating Windows, and removing Intel drivers. Despite having a capable laptop for general tasks, I'm at a loss; any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

E
elehal
Member
154
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#2
Could you please specify the precise make and model of the laptop?
E
elehal
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #2

Could you please specify the precise make and model of the laptop?

T
ThatPhoenix
Junior Member
49
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#3
workunion:
Could you please specify the precise laptop model number?
17ab-305nm
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ThatPhoenix
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #3

workunion:
Could you please specify the precise laptop model number?
17ab-305nm

H
HolyNight98
Member
187
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#4
That notebook’s graphics card is built-in. Please obtain and set up NVIDIA GeForce Experience. After installation, in the upper-left corner, select “Drivers” to search for updated versions.
https://www.geforce.com/geforce-experience/download
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HolyNight98
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #4

That notebook’s graphics card is built-in. Please obtain and set up NVIDIA GeForce Experience. After installation, in the upper-left corner, select “Drivers” to search for updated versions.
https://www.geforce.com/geforce-experience/download

S
Samu02
Member
184
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#5
The graphics card in that notebook is built-in. You should download and install NVIDIA GeForce Experience. After installation, in the upper left corner, click on “Drivers” to search for the newest versions.
https://www.geforce.com/geforce-experience/download
I've done this before; the most recent drivers are already set up using GeForce Experience.
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Samu02
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #5

The graphics card in that notebook is built-in. You should download and install NVIDIA GeForce Experience. After installation, in the upper left corner, click on “Drivers” to search for the newest versions.
https://www.geforce.com/geforce-experience/download
I've done this before; the most recent drivers are already set up using GeForce Experience.

B
bananabrownnie
Junior Member
18
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#6
Okay. Since you possess a single video card, you should solely install NVIDIA drivers. You should also have Intel drivers installed for your motherboard chipset. There’s no need to disable any settings due to the presence of one graphics card.

Have you utilized Intel Auto Detect?

https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/...stant.html
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bananabrownnie
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #6

Okay. Since you possess a single video card, you should solely install NVIDIA drivers. You should also have Intel drivers installed for your motherboard chipset. There’s no need to disable any settings due to the presence of one graphics card.

Have you utilized Intel Auto Detect?

https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/...stant.html

M
mcDavoz
Senior Member
544
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#7
workunion :
Ok. So you only have 1 video card. So you should have only have Nividia installed. You should also have Intel drivers installed for your chipset. There is nothing you can disable since you have 1 card.
Have you used intel auto detect?
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/...stant.html
Nono, you must have misuderstood, I have a dedicated nvidia gpu and a integrated intel gpu both recognised by the system, both working. my issue is that the system keeps switching between the GPUs while in game causing frame drops.
It shouldnt be using the intel at all for gaming but for some reason it does
M
mcDavoz
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #7

workunion :
Ok. So you only have 1 video card. So you should have only have Nividia installed. You should also have Intel drivers installed for your chipset. There is nothing you can disable since you have 1 card.
Have you used intel auto detect?
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/...stant.html
Nono, you must have misuderstood, I have a dedicated nvidia gpu and a integrated intel gpu both recognised by the system, both working. my issue is that the system keeps switching between the GPUs while in game causing frame drops.
It shouldnt be using the intel at all for gaming but for some reason it does

T
TommyTheLommy
Posting Freak
846
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#8
I'm experiencing confusion. Your computer’s portable device possesses a single graphics processing unit. Please remove all graphics card drivers, retaining the NVIDIA drivers. Following the removal, restart your system and attempt again. The product details indicate only one card is present.

https://support.hp.com/ca-en/document/c05849354
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TommyTheLommy
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #8

I'm experiencing confusion. Your computer’s portable device possesses a single graphics processing unit. Please remove all graphics card drivers, retaining the NVIDIA drivers. Following the removal, restart your system and attempt again. The product details indicate only one card is present.

https://support.hp.com/ca-en/document/c05849354

S
SayNoToNWO
Posting Freak
879
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#9
Regarding your issue:

I understand your confusion. Your laptop is equipped with a single video card. To resolve this, please remove all video card drivers except for the NVIDIA ones. After removing them, reboot and attempt again.

The product specifications indicate only one card. See this HP support document: https://support.hp.com/ca-en/document/c05849354

I possess integrated Intel graphics that are unremovable, alongside an NVIDIA GPU. Uninstalling drivers is ineffective because Windows automatically reinstalls them upon restarting. The "Q" in the i5 7300HQ processor signifies the presence of integrated graphics.
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SayNoToNWO
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #9

Regarding your issue:

I understand your confusion. Your laptop is equipped with a single video card. To resolve this, please remove all video card drivers except for the NVIDIA ones. After removing them, reboot and attempt again.

The product specifications indicate only one card. See this HP support document: https://support.hp.com/ca-en/document/c05849354

I possess integrated Intel graphics that are unremovable, alongside an NVIDIA GPU. Uninstalling drivers is ineffective because Windows automatically reinstalls them upon restarting. The "Q" in the i5 7300HQ processor signifies the presence of integrated graphics.

L
livtheviking
Posting Freak
846
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM
#10
Ok. So if you go into your bios do you have a option to turn off intergrated or onboard devices?
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livtheviking
01-18-2025, 11:52 PM #10

Ok. So if you go into your bios do you have a option to turn off intergrated or onboard devices?

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