F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Laptop temps issue

Laptop temps issue

Laptop temps issue

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74
10-04-2016, 04:12 PM
#1
Laptop temperatures appear unusual. They rise about 15 degrees during turbo mode. Isn't turbo meant to boost fan speed for better cooling? Let me know if you're mistaken. A video is attached for reference. (i7 10750H, 1660Ti, Far Cry 3). The temps hit around 95°C in turbo (with maximum fans) and stay in the high 70s when silent (lower fan speed). WhatsApp Video 2021-10-06 at 12.41.13.mp4
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ICEbreaker_MC_
10-04-2016, 04:12 PM #1

Laptop temperatures appear unusual. They rise about 15 degrees during turbo mode. Isn't turbo meant to boost fan speed for better cooling? Let me know if you're mistaken. A video is attached for reference. (i7 10750H, 1660Ti, Far Cry 3). The temps hit around 95°C in turbo (with maximum fans) and stay in the high 70s when silent (lower fan speed). WhatsApp Video 2021-10-06 at 12.41.13.mp4

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Magic_Wolf_
Senior Member
530
10-04-2016, 06:48 PM
#2
I think this makes sense. Turbo mode is meant to boost the CPU clock speed, leading to higher temperatures and better performance. Silent mode, by name, aims to maintain low fan speeds, which requires reducing the clock speed to lower temperatures. I believe this clarifies how they work.
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Magic_Wolf_
10-04-2016, 06:48 PM #2

I think this makes sense. Turbo mode is meant to boost the CPU clock speed, leading to higher temperatures and better performance. Silent mode, by name, aims to maintain low fan speeds, which requires reducing the clock speed to lower temperatures. I believe this clarifies how they work.

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alevy3131
Member
156
10-04-2016, 09:20 PM
#3
It varies by model. This appears to be an Asus laptop, known for its powerful turbo settings that push performance to the limit. The cooling system responds by increasing fan speeds to maintain high output. Running at maximum capacity can cause increased heat generation.
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alevy3131
10-04-2016, 09:20 PM #3

It varies by model. This appears to be an Asus laptop, known for its powerful turbo settings that push performance to the limit. The cooling system responds by increasing fan speeds to maintain high output. Running at maximum capacity can cause increased heat generation.

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_Matoo_
Member
177
10-05-2016, 02:45 AM
#4
No, there is no method to boost fan speed while maintaining low clock speeds.
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_Matoo_
10-05-2016, 02:45 AM #4

No, there is no method to boost fan speed while maintaining low clock speeds.

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Chuck978
Member
110
10-05-2016, 04:04 AM
#5
For fan settings, open the manual section and adjust RPM to your needs. For clock speeds, apply ThrottleStop and utilize GPU clocking tools such as MSI Afterburner to modify the clock ratio and cap the speed.
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Chuck978
10-05-2016, 04:04 AM #5

For fan settings, open the manual section and adjust RPM to your needs. For clock speeds, apply ThrottleStop and utilize GPU clocking tools such as MSI Afterburner to modify the clock ratio and cap the speed.

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SushiCherry
Member
227
10-05-2016, 05:20 AM
#6
It seems the device is running warm, but not dangerously hot. Check for dust buildup or performance strain to ensure it stays cool.
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SushiCherry
10-05-2016, 05:20 AM #6

It seems the device is running warm, but not dangerously hot. Check for dust buildup or performance strain to ensure it stays cool.

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Brudora
Senior Member
726
10-05-2016, 07:20 AM
#7
No problem at all. Those numbers are normal for what you're seeing. It's just that the device is getting warm. Are those temperatures okay for your use case?
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Brudora
10-05-2016, 07:20 AM #7

No problem at all. Those numbers are normal for what you're seeing. It's just that the device is getting warm. Are those temperatures okay for your use case?

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haley123
Member
187
10-06-2016, 04:21 AM
#8
Maintain standard temperatures for an Intel laptop. To reduce power use, adjust Windows power settings so the CPU runs at a limited percentage, or lower the voltage.
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haley123
10-06-2016, 04:21 AM #8

Maintain standard temperatures for an Intel laptop. To reduce power use, adjust Windows power settings so the CPU runs at a limited percentage, or lower the voltage.