F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Looking for tips to boost your Intel Atom Z3735F?

Looking for tips to boost your Intel Atom Z3735F?

Looking for tips to boost your Intel Atom Z3735F?

N
NRedemption
Member
67
06-20-2016, 11:47 PM
#1
I own the NuVision TM800W560L Signature edition and have been attempting a few tweaks. Initially, I aimed to boost the tablet's Intel Atom Z3735F overclock. It appears this was already done on this Windows tablet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0pYajHwuuY. The source came from a Chinese forum where it was found, and here’s the link: https://tieba.baidu.com/p/3782654765. Unfortunately, the URL is no longer working or redirects, so I checked the Wayback Machine to retrieve it again: https://web.archive.org/web/201708231208...3782654765.

First, the thermal design power (TDP) needs to be unlocked via throttle stop. A helpful guide is available here: https://web.archive.org/web/201708262034...3774391940.

After following that tutorial, the next step was to adjust PPL as shown in a screenshot. The original thread also mentioned changing something similar, but the details differ from what I see now.

Then there’s a part about “roast chicken” – I’m not sure what it refers to and can’t reach the original post on Wayback. I tried running VMware Windows 7 with many tasks, which froze or slowed down significantly, eventually reaching around 78°C before stabilizing near 73-74°C without shutting down.

Questions:
1. Which ThrottleStop version should I use to unlock TDP as suggested?
2. I’m unsure how to interpret the “roast chicken” reference and need help organizing these steps.

Thanks a lot!
N
NRedemption
06-20-2016, 11:47 PM #1

I own the NuVision TM800W560L Signature edition and have been attempting a few tweaks. Initially, I aimed to boost the tablet's Intel Atom Z3735F overclock. It appears this was already done on this Windows tablet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0pYajHwuuY. The source came from a Chinese forum where it was found, and here’s the link: https://tieba.baidu.com/p/3782654765. Unfortunately, the URL is no longer working or redirects, so I checked the Wayback Machine to retrieve it again: https://web.archive.org/web/201708231208...3782654765.

First, the thermal design power (TDP) needs to be unlocked via throttle stop. A helpful guide is available here: https://web.archive.org/web/201708262034...3774391940.

After following that tutorial, the next step was to adjust PPL as shown in a screenshot. The original thread also mentioned changing something similar, but the details differ from what I see now.

Then there’s a part about “roast chicken” – I’m not sure what it refers to and can’t reach the original post on Wayback. I tried running VMware Windows 7 with many tasks, which froze or slowed down significantly, eventually reaching around 78°C before stabilizing near 73-74°C without shutting down.

Questions:
1. Which ThrottleStop version should I use to unlock TDP as suggested?
2. I’m unsure how to interpret the “roast chicken” reference and need help organizing these steps.

Thanks a lot!

M
MrDigatu
Member
151
06-30-2016, 08:42 PM
#2
Have you discovered a fix? I’m also searching and I’ve noticed the drivers are problematic. I’ve tested different Linux distributions, but they’re causing trouble. I’m currently using tiny10 x86 and am exploring a modified BIOS as well. My system is locked to a 32-bit loader even though the CPU is x64.
M
MrDigatu
06-30-2016, 08:42 PM #2

Have you discovered a fix? I’m also searching and I’ve noticed the drivers are problematic. I’ve tested different Linux distributions, but they’re causing trouble. I’m currently using tiny10 x86 and am exploring a modified BIOS as well. My system is locked to a 32-bit loader even though the CPU is x64.

A
AdmiralEagle
Junior Member
17
07-22-2016, 04:11 PM
#3
Hello, I understand your message clearly. From their conversation, they used throttle stop to unlock TDP, performed some CPU tasks to cause overheating and freezing, then had the CPU automatically increase frequency afterward. They mentioned it can't be reliably reproduced. "Roast chicken" was translated from 烤鸡, which actually means oven, referring to a stress test. These two words sound alike in pinyin.
A
AdmiralEagle
07-22-2016, 04:11 PM #3

Hello, I understand your message clearly. From their conversation, they used throttle stop to unlock TDP, performed some CPU tasks to cause overheating and freezing, then had the CPU automatically increase frequency afterward. They mentioned it can't be reliably reproduced. "Roast chicken" was translated from 烤鸡, which actually means oven, referring to a stress test. These two words sound alike in pinyin.