F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Solved 10750H along with undervolting

Solved 10750H along with undervolting

Solved 10750H along with undervolting

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BernyTheMan
Member
180
10-31-2025, 11:57 PM
#1
Can't understand this situation... in BIOS I've configured the undervolt to IA, but in Windows it appears blank with no display. I've attempted to tweak it in XTU, only getting a "proposed" setting while the default boot remains at 0. I'm unsure if the temperature reduction will be worth it. Playing Cyberpunk 2077 is already pushing my GPU to around 90°C with low settings and frame rate capped at 55 on my GE66 raider. It's not clear if I should continue playing for extended periods under such conditions.
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BernyTheMan
10-31-2025, 11:57 PM #1

Can't understand this situation... in BIOS I've configured the undervolt to IA, but in Windows it appears blank with no display. I've attempted to tweak it in XTU, only getting a "proposed" setting while the default boot remains at 0. I'm unsure if the temperature reduction will be worth it. Playing Cyberpunk 2077 is already pushing my GPU to around 90°C with low settings and frame rate capped at 55 on my GE66 raider. It's not clear if I should continue playing for extended periods under such conditions.

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TreeGirl101
Junior Member
37
11-08-2025, 03:47 AM
#2
To my understanding, you cannot lower the voltage below what the 10th generation Intel supports. Even newer BIOS updates for the 9th generation stopped allowing undervolting. This was true for my 9750h as well. Undervolting helps a lot, but Intel removed this feature from the BIOS as a security measure, so even if software claims it's possible, it doesn't actually change the voltage.
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TreeGirl101
11-08-2025, 03:47 AM #2

To my understanding, you cannot lower the voltage below what the 10th generation Intel supports. Even newer BIOS updates for the 9th generation stopped allowing undervolting. This was true for my 9750h as well. Undervolting helps a lot, but Intel removed this feature from the BIOS as a security measure, so even if software claims it's possible, it doesn't actually change the voltage.

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ChainChompz
Member
187
11-08-2025, 08:45 AM
#3
To my understanding, you cannot lower the voltage below what the 10th generation Intel supports. Even newer BIOS updates for the 9th generation made undervolting impossible. This was true for my 9750h as well. Undervolting helped a lot, but Intel removed that feature from the BIOS as a security measure. So even though some programs claim it's possible, in reality the voltage remains unchanged.
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ChainChompz
11-08-2025, 08:45 AM #3

To my understanding, you cannot lower the voltage below what the 10th generation Intel supports. Even newer BIOS updates for the 9th generation made undervolting impossible. This was true for my 9750h as well. Undervolting helped a lot, but Intel removed that feature from the BIOS as a security measure. So even though some programs claim it's possible, in reality the voltage remains unchanged.