@Biohaze - Have a look in the Options window. Lenovo likes to low ball the thermal throttling temperature. This is controlled by the PROCHOT Offset setting. If you do not see a lock icon near this setting, you can lower the PROCHOT Offset value which will raise the temperature when thermal throttling begins. The Intel default for this offset is 0. Some laptops use a value of 2 or 3 so throttling starts just before 100°C. Do some testing. If you find a value you like, you can use the Lock PROCHOT Offset option.
CINEBENCH is a real-world cross platform test suite that evaluates your computer's performance capabilities. CINEBENCH is based on MAXON's award-winn
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Most 9750H owners get better Cinebench results with the core much higher than the cache. Run a baseline test with the core and cache set equally at -120 mV. After that, start bumping the core in steps of -25 mV.
-120 mV cache and -200 mV core usually works well for Cinebench.
You might need to reduce the core for some games. Maybe -120 mV cache and -175 mV core. This can help bring the temps down a degree or two. Not much else you can do. Even with undervolting, all laptops with 9750H CPUs tend to run at full temperature.
Try turning on the Log File option in ThrottleStop. These log files cover what is important and leave out what is not. Some log files are "too much information".