F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Optimize performance on your 9750h with a Nitro 7 setup.

Optimize performance on your 9750h with a Nitro 7 setup.

Optimize performance on your 9750h with a Nitro 7 setup.

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peter4everpan
Member
235
09-26-2016, 02:51 AM
#1
I've just acquired an Acer Nitro 7 with a 9750h and 1660Ti. I'm very satisfied with it. However, after running userbenchmark, I saw that while the CPU performs well (96-99th percentile), it doesn't exceed 800 points in the all-core test. I've cleaned the dust and lowered the voltage, but it still throttles under heavy load. Others on different machines achieved scores between 950-1000 points across cores. Can I improve my CPU's multicore performance? Does switching the thermal paste help—temperatures are fine, but throttling isn't an issue? In TSBench, it only reaches 3.7 for all-core, and games hit 3.95. Would it be possible to raise the power limit somehow (throttle stop or XTU didn’t help), or would a custom unlocked BIOS be needed? Any Nitro 7 users have insights? Acer Nitro AN715-51 Performance Results - UserBenchmark
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peter4everpan
09-26-2016, 02:51 AM #1

I've just acquired an Acer Nitro 7 with a 9750h and 1660Ti. I'm very satisfied with it. However, after running userbenchmark, I saw that while the CPU performs well (96-99th percentile), it doesn't exceed 800 points in the all-core test. I've cleaned the dust and lowered the voltage, but it still throttles under heavy load. Others on different machines achieved scores between 950-1000 points across cores. Can I improve my CPU's multicore performance? Does switching the thermal paste help—temperatures are fine, but throttling isn't an issue? In TSBench, it only reaches 3.7 for all-core, and games hit 3.95. Would it be possible to raise the power limit somehow (throttle stop or XTU didn’t help), or would a custom unlocked BIOS be needed? Any Nitro 7 users have insights? Acer Nitro AN715-51 Performance Results - UserBenchmark

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Cajo04
Junior Member
29
09-26-2016, 02:56 AM
#2
Did that on my dad's Crapotop, adjusted the power limit to 99999 in ThrottleStop, and it stopped throttling. Since Windows 10 is slow, it keeps reinstalling the DTPF Processor participant. To stop this, you can run a registry edit script, though it also removes the DTPF framework, which is problematic because power throttling then restarts.
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Cajo04
09-26-2016, 02:56 AM #2

Did that on my dad's Crapotop, adjusted the power limit to 99999 in ThrottleStop, and it stopped throttling. Since Windows 10 is slow, it keeps reinstalling the DTPF Processor participant. To stop this, you can run a registry edit script, though it also removes the DTPF framework, which is problematic because power throttling then restarts.

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Gusstert
Junior Member
42
10-08-2016, 10:00 PM
#3
Turn off power limits using throttle stop. My i5-8265u is now beating both the 3400G and 2700 in multicore performance (Geekbench). In Cinebench it only began throttling due to poor cooling. My laptop is having this issue.
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Gusstert
10-08-2016, 10:00 PM #3

Turn off power limits using throttle stop. My i5-8265u is now beating both the 3400G and 2700 in multicore performance (Geekbench). In Cinebench it only began throttling due to poor cooling. My laptop is having this issue.

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ISquishy_
Junior Member
6
10-14-2016, 03:48 AM
#4
bright side...consistent 3GHz during Cinebench R23 with about 4200 points on multicore, and roughly 4600 in Geekbench 5
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ISquishy_
10-14-2016, 03:48 AM #4

bright side...consistent 3GHz during Cinebench R23 with about 4200 points on multicore, and roughly 4600 in Geekbench 5

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Iam2GD4U
Member
189
10-16-2016, 03:58 AM
#5
Located the .reg file but didn't see any dptf on my computer.
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Iam2GD4U
10-16-2016, 03:58 AM #5

Located the .reg file but didn't see any dptf on my computer.

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DJMicky
Junior Member
13
10-17-2016, 05:58 PM
#6
It seems you needed more than just a click, as this action doesn’t help you.
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DJMicky
10-17-2016, 05:58 PM #6

It seems you needed more than just a click, as this action doesn’t help you.

K
Kimplaze
Member
216
10-17-2016, 07:25 PM
#7
Adjust both short and long power to the maximum allowed value (999999). Secure the setting then ensure it won’t exceed 65W in real conditions.
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Kimplaze
10-17-2016, 07:25 PM #7

Adjust both short and long power to the maximum allowed value (999999). Secure the setting then ensure it won’t exceed 65W in real conditions.

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Justin9401
Member
211
10-17-2016, 08:06 PM
#8
I completed that and it remains at 56.2W. It’s odd because I saw somewhere that removing the DPTF feature only functions on certain laptops, and with an embedded controller managing power limits, adjusting it becomes more difficult.
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Justin9401
10-17-2016, 08:06 PM #8

I completed that and it remains at 56.2W. It’s odd because I saw somewhere that removing the DPTF feature only functions on certain laptops, and with an embedded controller managing power limits, adjusting it becomes more difficult.

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Jes987
Junior Member
48
10-24-2016, 04:03 PM
#9
downgraded to version 1.05 and the score increased to 873 just for fun
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Jes987
10-24-2016, 04:03 PM #9

downgraded to version 1.05 and the score increased to 873 just for fun

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RemguixX
Junior Member
41
10-26-2016, 12:15 AM
#10
Certain laptops come pre-set to restrict performance when reaching their maximum power draw, with the PL2 setting around 25% above the TDP. These are the recommended Intel settings. PL1 is 45W, PL2 is 56.25W. Changing the BIOS could affect these limits. Try running a ThrottleStop log during testing and share one in your next post. Some users achieved results by disabling the Intel Dynamic Performance and Thermal Framework driver and preventing Windows from reinstalling it. If you need more details, search online. For devices where power caps are forced by the EC, this might not matter.
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RemguixX
10-26-2016, 12:15 AM #10

Certain laptops come pre-set to restrict performance when reaching their maximum power draw, with the PL2 setting around 25% above the TDP. These are the recommended Intel settings. PL1 is 45W, PL2 is 56.25W. Changing the BIOS could affect these limits. Try running a ThrottleStop log during testing and share one in your next post. Some users achieved results by disabling the Intel Dynamic Performance and Thermal Framework driver and preventing Windows from reinstalling it. If you need more details, search online. For devices where power caps are forced by the EC, this might not matter.

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