The CPU remains at its speed even when temperatures exceed 90 degrees Celsius.
The CPU remains at its speed even when temperatures exceed 90 degrees Celsius.
Hi,
I recently bought an HP Omen laptop equipped with an AMD Ryzen 5800H and RTX 3060 GPU.
During setup, I faced issues with the unstable drivers provided by the manufacturer, which caused significant problems.
To resolve this, I installed AMD drivers from the official AMD website (AMD Adrenaline edition) and the Nvidia driver via GeForce Experience.
I observed that when temperatures exceed 90 degrees Celsius, the processor keeps running at 4GHz without reducing its speed or frequency to manage heat.
It only slows down after extended gaming sessions, but eventually returns to 4 GHz once the temperature stabilizes.
Still, at those high temperatures, the temps remain above 90 degrees.
Could this be typical behavior for this CPU? Are there any options to lower the processor speed and keep temperatures below 90°C?
Thanks!
Explore the bios settings to check for maximum or target temperature options. If not available, you can adjust maximum power or CPU clock speeds within Windows. As mentioned earlier, the processor can operate up to 100 degrees Celsius (specifically 105°C).
the laptop cpu often reaches temperatures as high as 100 degrees
Explore the bios settings to check for maximum or target temperature options. If not available, you can adjust maximum power or CPU clock speeds within Windows. As mentioned earlier, the processor can operate up to 100 degrees Celsius (specifically 105°C).
Thank you for your message.
I installed Ryzen Master but my processor isn't recognized.
I know the CPU can operate between 100-105 degrees, and I checked its technical details—it supports up to 105°C.
Could it be that a temperature range of 90-95 degrees is safe for extended gaming sessions? I also heard that temperatures above 90°C might harm the processor. Is this accurate?
Hi there. I understand you wanted to confirm. I’m not very familiar with the technical details, so I asked just to be sure. Please let me know if my question was too bothersome. Thank you again.