100 Degrees on your laptop CPU is overheating? NO !

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Published 2023-09-12

All Comments (21)
  • @afb9999
    Nice! Good luck with the new channel Sorin. You can change the max temp offset with a software called throttlestop and also undervolt the cpu to squeeze a few MHz more with the same power
  • @Techisol
    I like these short form videos and i like the longer videos. This channel will grow very well
  • Very helpful. This makes me feel alot better. I was super paranoid about frying the motherboard on my MSI Leopard
  • @mkrleza
    Excellent video. Best wishes with your new channels!
  • @therealbinchicken
    Perfect! i try to tell our customers this that the modern 12th gen i7 is too close to the 12th gen i5, with the thermal limit no difference. After a few years for heavy gamers we see the thermal paste can limit the performance heavily.
  • @markae0
    Great video of showing software testing the CPU and GPU.
  • @miki_god
    Wow i never conidered to put the thermal pad to use the case as an extra little bit of heatsink thanks for the tip u are awesome i have to try that
  • @warchieftain
    nice videošŸ‘ on a completely different note, elevating the laptop from the table helps a bit, or using the iets gt500 laptop cooler helps even further if any1 is interested
  • @Druidus98
    Interesting thoughts - I have never seen it that way.
  • excellent. very informative indeed. I wish I'd know this before buying a new Dell XPS i9 laptop! That said, I think they are definitely using the case as a heatsink, you need long/thick trousers to use it šŸ˜…šŸ˜…šŸ˜…
  • @1337Ox
    Just a little correction, the IA Cores power is not the GPU power (that would be the GT if you used integrated graphics). You can see the actual GPU power draw on the right (93 W). The CPU clock goes further down if you run the GPU test because it probably shares the heatsink and dumps more heat into the cooling system. That doesn't of course change anything what you said about modern laptops and the cooling, and I agree. There is no point getting a fast CPU when the cooling is not sufficient to let the CPU run at peak performance.
  • I have a Helios neo 16 laptop and it has a bigger heat sink and has vents from the bottom. The bigger vents also accumulate a lot of dust and my fans got damaged within 9 months and it was under warranty so the company has replaced the fans. So my conclusion is desktop level performance on laptop comes with compromise. U can only use it for a few months and then they start raising their cpu and gpu temps and even repasting won't make it like brand new.
  • @wearver
    My Dell G15 with Ryzen 7 behaves the same, however, in windows 10 cpu settings, i disable the turbo clock, and instead go to 4.7ghz, mantain in 3.6/ 3.8 and the temperature do not reach above 70Āŗ. Is better this way. If the turbo is enable, is rare to mantain the max clock, and stay on 4ghz or less on 95Āŗ...
  • @jozsiolah1435
    My laptopā€™s cpu and chipset was overheating in Asus, and Acer. To solve this problem, Youtube video watching is needed using Opera browser. The video has to be at higher res than what the cpu supports. I chose Cod Black ops full gameplay, at 720p res. That stressed the cpu, and the win halted like w95 in those days. After 10 retries, the cpu supported the 720p videos at Hd, and didnā€™t go over 80% cpu usage. The cpu remained hot by default, the power options didnā€™t react. When I discharged my battery in Bios, the cpu cooled down, and it became just a little warm by default, at high performance itā€™s just warm, but not hot.
  • @repairstudio4940
    How did I not know you had another channel Sorin?! Also was wondering, my Lenovo S340 runs constantly at 120 degrees fahrenheit, thermal paste was replaced a year ago and the fan is clean what do you suggest? Specs say it shouldn't run at such a high temp???