F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Omen by HP - Performance problems reported in version 17-w203nl

Omen by HP - Performance problems reported in version 17-w203nl

Omen by HP - Performance problems reported in version 17-w203nl

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_HardGamer_
Member
181
08-25-2016, 06:58 AM
#1
Hello fellow users. I recently faced a performance problem with my laptop and haven’t managed to fix it yet. I purchased a used Omen machine equipped with an 1070 processor and 8GB RAM, paired with a seventh-generation Intel i7. It’s running poorly, barely handling unmodified Skyrim smoothly even at the lowest settings. I attempted troubleshooting by following online suggestions like updating the BIOS, removing and reinstalling graphics drivers. It seems the thermal throttling might be the culprit—both GPU and CPU stay under 70°C, yet fans aren’t spinning up, even though they worked well after a BIOS update. I also wondered if the system isn’t relying on the built-in Intel graphics instead of the NVIDIA ones, but I’m not sure how to confirm that. I assumed there was no way around it since I couldn’t change graphics settings. I’m hoping someone can help me narrow down the cause before I’m stuck with limited options. Edit: Task Manager showed 100% usage on the graphics card. Overall, everything looks normal—currently using Ubuntu but Windows is also installed. The issue appears consistent across both OSes.
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_HardGamer_
08-25-2016, 06:58 AM #1

Hello fellow users. I recently faced a performance problem with my laptop and haven’t managed to fix it yet. I purchased a used Omen machine equipped with an 1070 processor and 8GB RAM, paired with a seventh-generation Intel i7. It’s running poorly, barely handling unmodified Skyrim smoothly even at the lowest settings. I attempted troubleshooting by following online suggestions like updating the BIOS, removing and reinstalling graphics drivers. It seems the thermal throttling might be the culprit—both GPU and CPU stay under 70°C, yet fans aren’t spinning up, even though they worked well after a BIOS update. I also wondered if the system isn’t relying on the built-in Intel graphics instead of the NVIDIA ones, but I’m not sure how to confirm that. I assumed there was no way around it since I couldn’t change graphics settings. I’m hoping someone can help me narrow down the cause before I’m stuck with limited options. Edit: Task Manager showed 100% usage on the graphics card. Overall, everything looks normal—currently using Ubuntu but Windows is also installed. The issue appears consistent across both OSes.

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Remigiusz1991
Member
68
08-25-2016, 07:29 AM
#2
You can instruct the PC to utilize the Nvidia graphics card via the Nvidia Control Panel. The 70C temperature should not cause thermal throttling; it's only slightly above your typical operating temperatures (60-65°C).
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Remigiusz1991
08-25-2016, 07:29 AM #2

You can instruct the PC to utilize the Nvidia graphics card via the Nvidia Control Panel. The 70C temperature should not cause thermal throttling; it's only slightly above your typical operating temperatures (60-65°C).

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Ward12
Posting Freak
895
08-25-2016, 08:19 AM
#3
Apparently your GPU operates at full capacity during gameplay yet temperatures remain under 60°C and power draw stays below 40W (or 60W when unplugged). Running glmark2 produced a score of 2048 while plugged in. You're using the original power brick, which delivers around 200W. Since you're in Japan with a European laptop, this setup might behave differently. Your glmark2 result dropped to 7941 when unplugged, with temperatures not rising and wattage only slightly increasing.

Update: Games seem fine without the power adapter. The power consumption appears low, possibly because the battery is handling the load.

Questions:
- Would a third-party power supply help increase capacity?
- Is a voltage converter necessary given your brick's wide voltage range?
- Should I try overclocking the GPU? It seems possible without deep BIOS access, though options are limited in software.

Thanks for your quick response, DavidCks
Edited November 14, 2022
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Ward12
08-25-2016, 08:19 AM #3

Apparently your GPU operates at full capacity during gameplay yet temperatures remain under 60°C and power draw stays below 40W (or 60W when unplugged). Running glmark2 produced a score of 2048 while plugged in. You're using the original power brick, which delivers around 200W. Since you're in Japan with a European laptop, this setup might behave differently. Your glmark2 result dropped to 7941 when unplugged, with temperatures not rising and wattage only slightly increasing.

Update: Games seem fine without the power adapter. The power consumption appears low, possibly because the battery is handling the load.

Questions:
- Would a third-party power supply help increase capacity?
- Is a voltage converter necessary given your brick's wide voltage range?
- Should I try overclocking the GPU? It seems possible without deep BIOS access, though options are limited in software.

Thanks for your quick response, DavidCks
Edited November 14, 2022

T
ThatMiningGuy
Senior Member
704
08-25-2016, 04:47 PM
#4
No, your Windows Power Plan is not currently set to High Performance.
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ThatMiningGuy
08-25-2016, 04:47 PM #4

No, your Windows Power Plan is not currently set to High Performance.

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Tyclonek
Member
81
08-25-2016, 06:27 PM
#5
Absolutely, the same applies to Ubuntu as well.
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Tyclonek
08-25-2016, 06:27 PM #5

Absolutely, the same applies to Ubuntu as well.