3/26/2023 0 Comments Intel extreme tuning utility 5.1.2![]() Power: For power throttling, it's my understanding Intel base the TDP of the CPU around the base clocks rather than the boost clocks. Modern desktop motherboards will often have an AVX offset where the CPU's frequency will drop when the CPU is under AVX loads in order to handle the temps, even if the overclock on the CPU is otherwise rock solid stable and the thermals managed by the cooling setup in non-AVX loads. In the case of one of my desktops, it's the difference between the overclocked CPU running in the lower 80s for hours on end at 100% load, vs hitting 100 degrees instantly and thermal throttling. See what happens with Prime95 with AVX on and off for example (or google it). You're also testing with torture test software, and this may be using AVX instructions, which cause a huge amount more heat than other loads which would load the CPU to 100%. ![]() If so, presumably because ~85 degrees is a temp you can get away with probably for quite a while, while 99 degrees really isn't. However, it's possible that to address thermal issues caused by the limited capabilities of laptops, Clevo have features in Clevo Control Centre or the BIOS that cause throttling below those temps. ![]() Temps: As Spydertracks says, you wouldn't normally expect the CPU to thermal throttle below 100 degrees. Thermal throttling, power throttling, and - above all - the CPU's frequencies. ![]() Apologies if I've missed this and it has already been covered in the suggest there are 3 things to think about. ![]()
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