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Overclock on an HP laptop??

Overclock on an HP laptop??

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zane5824
Junior Member
17
05-09-2017, 04:44 AM
#1
Hello, I own an HP Pavilion notebook with an Intel Core i5 6th gen 6200U processor. I've attempted to overclock through the BIOS and using Intel's overclocking tools. Is there any way to enable the BIOS to allow overclocking? Thank you in advance.
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zane5824
05-09-2017, 04:44 AM #1

Hello, I own an HP Pavilion notebook with an Intel Core i5 6th gen 6200U processor. I've attempted to overclock through the BIOS and using Intel's overclocking tools. Is there any way to enable the BIOS to allow overclocking? Thank you in advance.

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PACMAC22
Member
132
05-09-2017, 01:39 PM
#2
It's probably not going to work, but even if it does, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Doing so on a laptop is not advisable because they lack sufficient thermal or power capacity.
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PACMAC22
05-09-2017, 01:39 PM #2

It's probably not going to work, but even if it does, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Doing so on a laptop is not advisable because they lack sufficient thermal or power capacity.

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c_x_y
Member
227
05-26-2017, 02:23 AM
#3
It's probably not going to work, but even if it does, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Doing so on a laptop is not advisable because they lack sufficient thermal or power capacity.
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c_x_y
05-26-2017, 02:23 AM #3

It's probably not going to work, but even if it does, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Doing so on a laptop is not advisable because they lack sufficient thermal or power capacity.

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lewade2002
Junior Member
33
05-26-2017, 04:08 AM
#4
It's probably not going to work, but even if it did, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Overclocking a laptop isn't a good idea—they lack the necessary thermal and power capacity. Right now I'm at 28°C.
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lewade2002
05-26-2017, 04:08 AM #4

It's probably not going to work, but even if it did, it wouldn't be worth it. Any attempt at overclocking would likely lead to heat and power problems. Overclocking a laptop isn't a good idea—they lack the necessary thermal and power capacity. Right now I'm at 28°C.

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Tyson142
Member
148
05-26-2017, 09:29 AM
#5
Check the limits when under pressure? Laptops aren't built for overclocking, particularly those from HP and Dell.
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Tyson142
05-26-2017, 09:29 AM #5

Check the limits when under pressure? Laptops aren't built for overclocking, particularly those from HP and Dell.

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DatDrop
Member
190
05-26-2017, 11:03 AM
#6
Check what happens when things get tough. Laptops aren't built for overclocking, particularly those from HP and Dell.
on a stress test with Intel XTU it reached about 55-60C
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DatDrop
05-26-2017, 11:03 AM #6

Check what happens when things get tough. Laptops aren't built for overclocking, particularly those from HP and Dell.
on a stress test with Intel XTU it reached about 55-60C